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Posted
26 minutes ago, crs223 said:

 

1. Xi ended Zero COVID when the people rioted

2. Xi did not invade Taiwan

 

Are these the decisions of a madman?

He’s not mad, but he’s not smart and he’s arrogant.

if he’s smart he won’t push the zero Covid policy.  He will either invade Taiwan or not but it’s dumb to making threats if he plans to invade Taiwan (even more dumb if he doesn’t want to)

Posted
1 hour ago, zippy1 said:

Superficially, that may sound like that. 

However, I think Spek used to live and work in China. I think we should view this as an invitation to gain the first hand experience.

I also have many friends who had lived in China before.  They had moved there in the 2000s, but moved out again in the last 3-4 years. They all felt the political winds have changed dramatically.  

I never lived in China. I have family from my wife’s side who lived in Hongkong and some of her friends and extended family still liver there but most have left. my wife speaks Cantonese.

I have worked in China for a couple of weeks at a time with a few tours from 2010 to 2015. I love Chinese food - Szechuan, Hunan and Cantonese (favorite is Dim Sum).

 

I am hardly an expert but sort of tied in through my wife’s family who are ethnically Chinese. It doesn’t make me an expert but more an interested person. Most Chinese are pretty dismayed by what’s going on in China and even more so in HK.

 

It is not widely know, but Xi Jinping wants to normalize the multicultural China into one culture (Han / Mandarin), so they try to eradicate  other cultures like Uyghurs or even Cantonese (Cantonese use is discouraged now in Guangdong and even Hongkong) to make it all the same and more homogenous.

 

So I am not the typical China hater, but I hate to see what’s happening there. I think @tnp20 in his first post captures the situation fairly well, I am much more skeptical in terms of investing then he is and would only for into Chinese equities for a trade.

Posted

I know a lot Chinese. They might disagree with each other on topics like Taiwan, Russia or if China has better systems than US. But i have yet to meet one Chinese think Xi is not stupid. 

Posted
31 minutes ago, Spekulatius said:

I never lived in China. I have family from my wife’s side who lived in Hongkong and some of her friends and extended family still liver there but most have left. my wife speaks Cantonese.

I have worked in China for a couple of weeks at a time with a few tours from 2010 to 2015. I love Chinese food - Szechuan, Hunan and Cantonese (favorite is Dim Sum).

 

Sorry about that, Spek!

Posted (edited)
13 hours ago, tnp20 said:

I am a china Bull short to medium term but not long term and not because of demographics in particular....well sort of....

 

https://themarket.ch/interview/george-magnus-china-will-not-be-able-to-de-dollarize-under-xi-ld.9180

 

https://themarket.ch/english/china-is-in-danger-of-growing-far-below-its-potential-ld.9068

 

https://www.pekingnology.com/p/tourism-industry-official-deplores

 

After China's covid policy - many ex-pats have left never to return again. Tourists are not going to China anymore and is a crisis situation....many folks who move to China lament the fact that they can't stay in touch with family and information flows as easily as China sensors internet/social media heavily. This basic freedom or lack thereof means that the world's best minds and tech entrepreneurs will not find China and appealing destination to settle for themselves and their family. The covid experience probably fades after a while but those who stayed in china during COVID universally had a very bad experience and many left. The issue is level of freedom and lack there of.

With their demographic issue, with number of people declining and number of smart capable people decline in proportion  they will have ever decreasing number of people who can drive the engine of growth and innovation unless they can attract smart talent from elsewhere but who wants to go to China when you can go somewhere else thats free-er and better.

 

Many rich Chinese themselves have a second passport - just in case. No one trusts the regime - yes there is CCP propaganda for the masses but the smart folks are all keeping an insurance policy as they are not drinking the cool aid.

 

Xi is all about Control, Stability and Strength. Xi's thinking/policies/principles are in direct conflict with whats needed for China to be a long term success. Free markets need some level of basic openness and freedoms to succeed long term. Anyone who says XI is smart doesnt know what they are talking about!!!! I have had number of discussions with people who know and understand China intimately. There are smart Chinese in the upper echelon trying to do their best to tame Xi's worst tendencies but what Xi wants and what is truly needed for China to succeed are in direct conflict. Xi is too stupid to realize this dilemma. (as opposed to dont care what color the cat is as long as it catches mice thinking)...so the answer is China's success will be either limited/plateaued or worse fades fast after a peak in a the next decade or so. Of course another leader could take over and course corrects but thats a different matter. I had several Chinese friends who thought a decade or so ago that China would slowly liberalize/open up not just its markets but in terms of some form of semi-democracy - yes probably with chinese characteristics with CCP still playing a central role but more open/liberal political scene. Li Lu and Tianamin square student movement was crushed by the previous regime so they knew population is yearning for more freedoms. Super fast (and unscientific ) Pivot of covid policy was a affirmation that Xi's stupid policies  were about to cause major unrest and to prevent that they had to pivot to maintain control. China may do well despite Xi's policies but its super power status that replaces the USA is highly unlikely because of these structural issues.

 

Xi's failure are many but include:- (i) Highly damaging Covid policy - left many people and companies and local governments indebted (ii) Value destroying Tech/Education/private company crack down (iii) wolf warrior policy. The latter has delivered numerous countries right into US's lap and now are actively in part of some alliance against China.  Many of the same countries were neutral before their wolf warrior policy. Why did they need to make so many enemies needlessly ? The countries that matter in Asia over the next 30 years are India, Indonesia and Japan - they have the population growth, economic growth or GDP weight to matter. They are direct economic and military competitors to China.

 

 

To me this seems to be just macro noise, we like to point out the flaws and problems with chinas system, but problems with the US are not likely to be discussed. And if they are discussed its foreign propaganda. Talking about chinas structural issures as if the US has none. Talking about china making enemies and the US none? What about crime rates in the US? Extreme gatekeeping for education, gatekeeping to leave an inefficient market system where people live paycheck to paycheck, are more and more burned out, more and more on psychiatric drugs. Corrupt political leadership, sleepy leadership. What about the people leaving the US for Europe?

 

The biggest problem are the birthrates, and I am confident that if a country can bring them up, it's china. They also won't light their economy on fire by getting back to a completely state planned economy and I also dont think that Xi is will fail as a leader.

 

Edited by Luca
Posted
9 hours ago, Castanza said:

Would you want Wagner with the nuke codes? Somehow that’s  even worse than Putin having that control. ...

 

There is already a strong reaction from the Baltic states related to the presence of Russian nuclear warheads in Belarus, combined with information of the presence of Jevgenij Prigozjin in Belarus, too.

 

It's for sure concerning.

Posted

Fixing the birth rates problem in China is very hard and with the economy in the doldrums and youth unemployment exceeding 20% is not going to happen in the near future either.

 

The young generation is screwed by XI Jinping policies (suppressing and controlling tech industry, high housing costs, public school system requiring expensive tutoring to get a good education etc). Not all of it can be blamed on Ci Jinping, but his policies certainly have not been helping.

 

Japan has a better chance at fixing their demographics than China, because they can boost emigration (which is slowly happening already). China is too large and not many want to move there anyways and more people are going to move out of China than emigrate.

Posted (edited)
53 minutes ago, Spekulatius said:

Fixing the birth rates problem in China is very hard and with the economy in the doldrums and youth unemployment exceeding 20% is not going to happen in the near future either.

It wont be solved in the next year but if we look back at our discussion here in a decade, i am quite sure it will look much better. 

53 minutes ago, Spekulatius said:

 

The young generation is screwed by XI Jinping policies (suppressing and controlling tech industry, high housing costs, public school system requiring expensive tutoring to get a good education etc). Not all of it can be blamed on Ci Jinping, but his policies certainly have not been helping.

1. People complain about low wages, expensive tutoring, high living costs.

 

2. People complain about policies that regulate expensive tutoring companies, low wages by JD (forced increase by government), increase in competitive market to prevent monopolies destroying growth.

 

China never does it right according to the west. 

 

Also look at the US, the social isolation, the mental health epidemic, huge student debts and what not. Its just not the full picture and macro orientated. If you believe the government will ruin the country then yeah, sell all china stocks. I dont think their track record shows that though.  

 

Regarding US control of employees (https://www.truthdig.com/articles/noam-chomsky-america-has-built-a-global-dystopia/

 

All of this goes, is moving on to controlling people at work. So by now, there’s the beginning–actually it began in Sweden, but it’s now expanded here–of placing chips in working people with an inducement. If you agree to have a chip inserted then you get, you know, free access to the coffee machine, and you can do all these interesting things, so people do it. But it also controls your actions. Like if you’re in an Amazon warehouse, they already have systems–which is backbreaking work–they’ve worked out the quickest routes between this spot and that spot.

 

And if you’re one of these people racing to try to keep up with a schedule, and you deviate from the route, you get a discredit immediately. You get an instant warning if you take off a little time to say hello to a friend, you get a warning. UPS is using it to control truck drivers. So if you back up when you shouldn’t have, you get a warning. If you stop for a cup of coffee when that wasn’t on your schedule, you get a warning. They’ve, in fact, they claim they’ve increased efficiency; these people internalize all this, and you race to keep to the commands, and they can claim they can now have more deliveries with fewer drivers, and so on.

 

Lots of these things are also happening in China, they are not innocent. The bias against them though is so massive.

 

 

53 minutes ago, Spekulatius said:

 

Japan has a better chance at fixing their demographics than China, because they can boost emigration (which is slowly happening already). China is too large and not many want to move there anyways and more people are going to move out of China than emigrate.

USA has really good PR, its crumbling though if you actually visit New York. Not looking as good as the pictures. They did a really good job making China look like the devil so i give them that. All these articles with Xi Jinping looking like Hitler in Financial Times, New York Post, any other western big newspaper. 

 

U.S. multinationals dominate the world. If they had moved to independent development, we’d see exactly what we’re seeing with China today. It’s moving toward independent development; U.S. is trying to prevent it. The policies, shared bipartisan policies, are to try to prevent Chinese [independent] development. So if China, for example–you know, the mantra is “China’s stealing our jobs.” Is China stealing our jobs? They don’t have a gun to the head of Tim Cook, saying invest here. The U.S. multinationals are losing our jobs. But we don’t want China to develop as an economy.

 

That’s why the bipartisan programs are to prevent China from doing the things that make the economy successful–like industrial policy, to have a state industrial policy. We see that that’s successful; we want them to stop it. Kind of interesting, because that’s–economists and others, if they believe a word they’re saying, ought to be cheering. According to their theories, if the state intervenes in the economy, it’s going to harm the economy. But everyone knows the opposite is true. In fact, we ourselves have a massive state industrial policy. That’s why you have things like computers and the internet and so on, it’s mainly public funding. But we don’t want China to have that, because they’ll be successful, they’ll be out of our control; that we don’t want. That’s what the kind of concern was in the fifties. So I think the imperial model has been very successful. It’s led to a situation in which it’s primarily designed for the benefit of U.S. capital, which has succeeded beyond belief.

 

 

In some way all of those agendas are good for the big western multinationals but if this continues there will be more decoupling as far as it is possible. The US is already doing it themselves, banning Nvidia GPUs soon. Will only take time when there will be problems with Apple. Will be interesting to see who sides with whom, Chinas economy is strong but not as strong as the US yet. 

Edited by Luca
Posted

Huang also worried that Chinese companies, unable to access US products, would start to build their own chips to rival Nvidia's market-leading chips. "If we are deprived of the Chinese market, we don't have a contingency for that," the Nvidia CEO told FT. Most important of all, according to Huang, blocking the US tech industry's access to China would undermine the Chips Act. If losing the Chinese market, the US tech industry would require one-third less capacity, Huang pointed out. "No one is going to need American fabs, we will be swimming in fabs."

 

https://www.digitimes.com/news/a20230628VL203/us-china-chip-ban-ai-chips-nvidia.html

 

This is getting very tense and interesting. 

Posted (edited)

This is rather long but is an excellent and balanced piece on China opportunities but also glaring issues.

 

This guy spent 30 years in the National Planning Commission coming up with the goals and execution for nation nth 5 year plan.

 

https://www.pekingnology.com/p/ex-ndrc-officials-comprehensive-review

 

The last paragraph says it all...

 

In summary, to address the structural economic slowdown in China, it is not necessary to solely rely on expanding domestic demand. Stimulating government investment through fiscal stimulus is not sustainable, considering the increasing debt burden of local governments and the limited room for further borrowing. Instead, focusing on supply-side structural reforms, such as addressing regulations in the real estate sector and promoting long-term public rental housing, while encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship, can lead to more efficient and sustainable economic growth. These reforms can also foster the development of new industries, technologies, products, and services. Emphasizing market-oriented reforms, rule-of-law governance, property rights protection, inclusivity, openness, and innovation and entrepreneurship will contribute to overcoming the current economic challenges, aligning with the original intent of China's reform and opening-up policy initiated in 1978. We must unswervingly stick to that route.

 

 

I think author is saying Xi has veered off course and thats not going to be good...we need to get back on the old track....

 

Three-legged stool of capitalism Chinese style is unlikely to work well because:-

(i) rule-of-law governance - no CCP value destroying matras on tech/education, etc

(ii) Openness - Foreigners were blocked access to CHinese equivalent from Bloomberg recently for financial/market data

                        - Access to global uncensored internet so people can make informed decisions and foreigners can easily stay in touch with their famiies

                        - Xi has made china more of a jail - who wants to live in a jail ?

(iii) inclusivity  - Xi prosecution of Uihguyr and tibetan culture , Pushing Han/Mandarin culture as the primary

(iv) Entrepreneurship - stop attacking entrepreneurs , innovation comes from private enterprises, not SOE ...Xi has reversed trend favors SOEs.

 

My point is China has potential, but they also have a lot of structural issues and the ideological Xi is not helping the situation with bad ideas.

 

 

 

Edited by tnp20
  • Like 1
Posted
15 minutes ago, tnp20 said:

This is rather long but is an excellent and balanced piece on China opportunities but also glaring issues.

 

This guy spent 30 years in the National Planning Commission coming up with the goals and execution for nation nth 5 year plan.

 

https://www.pekingnology.com/p/ex-ndrc-officials-comprehensive-review

 

The last paragraph says it all...

 

In summary, to address the structural economic slowdown in China, it is not necessary to solely rely on expanding domestic demand. Stimulating government investment through fiscal stimulus is not sustainable, considering the increasing debt burden of local governments and the limited room for further borrowing. Instead, focusing on supply-side structural reforms, such as addressing regulations in the real estate sector and promoting long-term public rental housing, while encouraging innovation and entrepreneurship, can lead to more efficient and sustainable economic growth. These reforms can also foster the development of new industries, technologies, products, and services. Emphasizing market-oriented reforms, rule-of-law governance, property rights protection, inclusivity, openness, and innovation and entrepreneurship will contribute to overcoming the current economic challenges, aligning with the original intent of China's reform and opening-up policy initiated in 1978. We must unswervingly stick to that route.

 

 

I think author is saying Xi has veered off course and thats not going to be good...we need to get back on the old track....

 

Three-legged stool of capitalism Chinese style is unlikely to work well because:-

(i) rule-of-law governance - no CCP value destroying matras on tech/education, etc

(ii) Openness - Foreigners were blocked access to CHinese equivalent from Bloomberg recently for financial/market data

                        - Access to global uncensored internet so people can make informed decisions and foreigners can easily stay in touch with their famiies

                        - Xi has made china more of a jail - who wants to live in a jail ?

(iii) inclusivity  - Xi prosecution of Uihguyrs , Pushing Han/Mandarin culture as the primary

(iv) Entrepreneurship - stop attacking entrepreneurs , innovation comes from private enterprises, not SOE ...Xi has reversed trend favors SOEs.

 

My point is China has potential, but they also have a lot of structural issues and the ideological Xi is not helping the situation with bad ideas.

 

 

 


I suspect at least some of the bad execution of Xi’s policies is due to his lack of support from people working for him. I suspect sometimes people intentionally make things look bad when carrying out his policies.

 

today there are news that Tencent and Ant will link foreign credit card to their payment systems. Currently a foreigner who travel to China can’t use wechat pay unless he has a Chinese resident ID. My hope is Chinese companies and people keep finding ways to cope with the bad policies.

Posted (edited)
4 hours ago, Spekulatius said:

young generation is screwed by XI Jinping policies (suppressing and controlling tech industry

 

Can you explain more about this?

 

My understanding is that Xi has 1) restricted video game playing 2) kidnapped Alibaba CEO and held him for ransom to discourage monopolies 3) slapped down Didi ride sharing app (not sure what that was about) 4) suppress speech by using “great firewall” and social scoring system (I think this started before Xi)

 

How did Xi policies screw the younger generation?

 

If he did the opposite of each of those tech policies (or just not implement), would that have helped the younger generation?

 

 

 

Edited by crs223
Posted
1 hour ago, crs223 said:

 

Can you explain more about this?

 

My understanding is that Xi has 1) restricted video game playing 2) kidnapped Alibaba CEO and held him for ransom to discourage monopolies 3) slapped down Didi ride sharing app (not sure what that was about) 4) suppress speech by using “great firewall” and social scoring system (I think this started before Xi)

 

How did Xi policies screw the younger generation?

 

If he did the opposite of each of those tech policies (or just not implement), would that have helped the younger generation?

 

 

 

He is screwing the younger people by scaring away foreign investments from China (the preferred employer for many younger people) and holding back growth in the tech sector in favor of a more government controlled economy. This makes it harder for younger people to get well paying jobs.

Posted
37 minutes ago, Spekulatius said:

He is screwing the younger people by scaring away foreign investments from China (the preferred employer for many younger people) and holding back growth in the tech sector in favor of a more government controlled economy. This makes it harder for younger people to get well paying jobs.


I know someone who lives in China. She was a big fan of CCP, posting CCP flags on her wechat whenever there’s some international news about China. She also worked for baba and her income was very high compared to average Chinese and certainly compare to her parents’ peak earnings.  Then when CCP cracked down on tech firms, she lost her job. Then she found a new job in Shanghai for a company doing HR back office for other companies. Lost her jobs again after a year. Then she found a new job with an IT company but hasn’t been paid for the last 3 months because the IT company’s only customer is the local government who ran out of money to pay the company’s bill . So yeah, she now is very pissed off with the govt and is asking how to buy a VPN account so she can visit oversea internet and play with ChatGPT.


 

 

 

 

Posted
2 hours ago, sleepydragon said:

I suspect at least some of the bad execution of Xi’s policies is due to his lack of support from people working for him. I suspect sometimes people intentionally make things look bad when carrying out his policies.

 

Well its several things....

 

(i) Xi is still primarily to blame, not his people.Xi is an ideologue going in the wrong/different direction from the original 1978 opening up intentions. The old direction's destination was what we are more used to in the west. The new Xi direction is trying to take USSR/Maoist style control and bolting it on to capitalism. He still sees value in the old system (if you gut out the failed economic model that didnt work) because he thinks (Waning Huning is his strategic advisor) the West is failing with too much freedom and too much openess, and also threats that poses to the CCP. This is like threading a needle....there arent any successful examples of what he is trying to do and he is dumb because he doesn't realize the openess/inclusivity/freedom/property rights is an integral part of capitalism that you can't pick and choose.

 

(ii) His people are scared shitless. That top down command structure where if you fail to meet Xi's metric (what ever crazy idea he has) your career suffers. They are doing this half-hearted not to piss of Xi. They are not sure what many of his directives actually mean so they err on side of safety and caution resulting in half baked implementation. e.g. Despite crack down on the education sector, black market tuition is back with full force. XI's intention was to lower the financial pressure on average Chinese to get their kids in top schools ...so now instead of the formal education sector now its underground and there is an information black market education sector.

 

(iii) The smart ones are probably actively sabotaging his policies to make him look bad - but I dont have examples of that and it would take a lot of damage and time to remove Xi ...coup is China has a very low probability...best one can hope for is some physical or mental incapacitation.

 

 

Posted
37 minutes ago, gfp said:

So... she lives in China, worked for BABA and an IT company and needs to ask you how to get a VPN???

The vpns has be bought online. Apparently she didnt know how to (and never try to) cross the China internet wall before. But now like other out of job young people, everyone is doing it.
 

I don’t know how to buy vpns too, and I have more tech experience than her. 

Posted

I think this discussion is omitting some of the recent events globally and in China that may have influenced the direction of Xi's development.  None of this is original on my part.  I've pulled this from reading various China analysts across the spectrum over the last dozen years.

 

1) GFC - we are all being highly ahistorical in not recognizing how profoundly this event shook the Chinese leadership's idea of what was the right development model for China.  Under Jiang and Hu (1989-2012), China CPC had largely taken it for granted that the US economic model was the right path for them to follow.  After the GFC, and the huge China stimulus in 2012 (?) that helped pull the global economy out of the doldrums of GFC crisis, they went back and re-evaluated this thinking.

 

2) 2012 Succession Turmoil - Bo Xilai and his downfall and the exposure of vast corruption and crime networks was the harbinger of Xi's 2013 anti-corruption campaigns.  However, the bigger issue that was also espoused by Hu was that corruption was a huge threat to CPC legitimacy and rule.  Xi's anti-corruption campaign took out Zhou Yongkang from Jiang's Shanghai clique, it took out General Xu who was basically running various divisions of the PLA as his own money making enterprise.  I think Xi took a page from Bo Xilai who had used a "Red guard" movement to fire up in a populist way Maoist orthodoxy as a way to control CPC politicos in Chongqing, and so he rolled out Xi Jinping thought - basically as a prop to be able to control party members.  What we've seen from Putin is a testament to unchecked corruption in an authoritarian regime.  It leads to chaos and eventual loss of control.

Posted (edited)
21 hours ago, rogermunibond said:

I think this discussion is omitting some of the recent events globally and in China that may have influenced the direction of Xi's development.  None of this is original on my part.  I've pulled this from reading various China analysts across the spectrum over the last dozen years.

 

1) GFC - we are all being highly ahistorical in not recognizing how profoundly this event shook the Chinese leadership's idea of what was the right development model for China.  Under Jiang and Hu (1989-2012), China CPC had largely taken it for granted that the US economic model was the right path for them to follow.  After the GFC, and the huge China stimulus in 2012 (?) that helped pull the global economy out of the doldrums of GFC crisis, they went back and re-evaluated this thinking.

 

2) 2012 Succession Turmoil - Bo Xilai and his downfall and the exposure of vast corruption and crime networks was the harbinger of Xi's 2013 anti-corruption campaigns.  However, the bigger issue that was also espoused by Hu was that corruption was a huge threat to CPC legitimacy and rule.  Xi's anti-corruption campaign took out Zhou Yongkang from Jiang's Shanghai clique, it took out General Xu who was basically running various divisions of the PLA as his own money making enterprise.  I think Xi took a page from Bo Xilai who had used a "Red guard" movement to fire up in a populist way Maoist orthodoxy as a way to control CPC politicos in Chongqing, and so he rolled out Xi Jinping thought - basically as a prop to be able to control party members.  What we've seen from Putin is a testament to unchecked corruption in an authoritarian regime.  It leads to chaos and eventual loss of control.

That's a good background.

 

Since Putin came up - there is a parallel that his original agenda was about fighting corruption as well. This quickly seems to morph into eliminating political adversaries for both Xi Jinping and Putin.

 

I remember  a significant bear market for luxury business around 2015 when Xi Jinpings first go around with his corruption fighting agenda, which took down the market for ultra luxury cognacs and expensive watches and similar goods in China. I guess this market is back - does it mean corruption came back? I have honestly no idea but it's interesting to see how these things go in cycles.

Edited by Spekulatius

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