Scot Mcphee on Mon, 31 Mar 2008 02:38:23 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Brits in hock--or, Atlas shrugged again |
On 27-03-2008, at 8:06 PM, Felix Stalder wrote: > On Saturday, 22. March 2008, Brian Holmes wrote: >> Reading a book called "China's New Consumers"--where >> you find out that by comparison to the West, there really aren't >> any-- > > Apparently, it's not just because China is, overall, still a poor > country that there are so few consumers, but a result of government > policy, at least according to a great article which appeared in the > Atlantic Monthly earlier this year. Below is a quote, but the whole > article is worth reading. > > http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200801/fallows-chinese-dollars/ Later in that article the author talks about the role of the Chinese sovereign funds and the purchase of airplanes and U.S. assets and the like. I think it is important to note that the Chinese already are apparently trying to use these funds for foreign policy ends. The proposed attempt by BHP to buy Rio Tinto being the example. These two companies are already the largest suppliers of raw minerals to the Chinese manufacturers. Recently BHP has been a bit bolshie about the prices it's getting for the iron ore in its forward contracts. The Chinese of course certainly don't want to see a situation where all their ore has to be bought from the one mega-sized mining monolith, and bought nearly enough of RTZ to block at least a complete takeover. The Chinese certainly take a 'long view' in their use of their investment funds in their materials sources. For example a couple of years ago they signed a huge natural gas deal which gave them a 25% holding in the extraction company - and access to the extraction technologies. It's not that the Chinese lack the natural resources, they lack the sophisticated and very capital-intensive technology needed to get the stuff out of the ground - my view would be they actually value the extraction technology far more highly than the gas itself. In 50 years that investment will pay itself off. You would think though they could divert at least some of their funds into some public infrastructure like schools, sewage, and parks without completely draining their ability to wield their substantial foreign investment clout. As for the bigger issues, it is in fact a structural issue that the US economy for at least two decades has been drawing funds in from all over the world. It's a psychology issue - people perceive the T-Bond specifically, and the US markets in general as being the most solid and reliable investment one can make - the safest bet. Although Bush is trying his hardest to break this perception with his general incompetence in all areas -- especially his massive deficits to fund the most wrong-headed war since 1918 (as well as the financial institutions themselves with their ridiculously short-sighted greed coming to burn their own backsides and evaporate confidence) -- in reality that it will take more than a single President or a credit crisis to realign the perceptions and the markets. But when this realignment comes - as I think it inevitably must - it will be a titanic shift in global power. Not necessarily in China's favour either, because I think it's essentially chaotic, that is when the system bifurcates and moves to a new zone of stability you can't be sure which one of the available zones will be the new settling point. For all we know Russia will be the big winner; it's also becoming increasingly cashed up and it's major commodities - energy and military hardware - will be in increasing demand. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mail.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org