Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

China warns France

December 9th 2008

China warns France over meeting with Dalailama
[/ul] by Marianne Barriaux Marianne Barriaux – Fri Nov 14, 9:42 am ET
China on Friday warned that French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s planned meeting with the Dalailama, …
BEIJING (AFP) – China on Friday hit out at French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s planned meeting with the Dalailama, warning it could hurt relations between the two countries.
“Currently relations between China and France, and Europe and China, are in the process of improving and developing, and this situation is the result of hard work. So we should cherish it,” foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang said.
“We ask France to look at the big picture… pay attention to China’s serious concerns and handle relevant issues properly to promote the stable development of Sino-French and European and Chinese relations.”
Sarkozy is planning to meet the Dalailama, Tibet’s exiled spiritual leader, next month during a visit to Poland.
“We resolutely oppose foreign leaders having any form of contact with the Dalailama,” Qin said in a statement released in response to Sarkozy’s announcement.
China and France went through a rough patch this year when Sarkozy said his attendance at the Beijing Olympic opening ceremony was conditional on progress in talks between Beijing and DalaiLama envoys on the future of Tibet.
He did attend the ceremony.
Protesters also disrupted the passage of the Olympic flame in several cities — including Paris — following unrest in Tibet, further damaging relations between China and France, although these have since improved.
The Dalailama has sought “meaningful autonomy” for Tibet since he fled his homeland following a failed uprising in 1959 against Chinese rule, nine years after Chinese troops invaded the region.
China claims he actually seeks full independence.
The Dalailama has already met French foreign minister Bernard Kouchner, human rights minister Rama Yade and first lady Carla Bruni on a visit to France in August.
Sarkozy then declined to meet him after Beijing warned that such direct contact would have serious consequences for bilateral relations.
The DalaiLama and Sarkozy will both be attending ceremonies in Poland to mark the 25th anniversary of the awarding of the Nobel Peace prize to Lech Walesa, the anti-communist union activist who later became president.
The Buddhist leader was also awarded the prestigious prize in 1989.

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CHINA’S GREAT DEPRESSION

November 17th 2008

Krassimir Petrov:CHINA’S GREAT DEPRESSION  

Having recently completed Rothbard’s “America’s Great Depression”, I couldn’t help draw the parallels between America’s roaring 20’s and China’s roaring economy today, and I couldn’t help conclude that China will inevitably fall in a depression just like America did during the 1930s. The ive of this article is to present an Austrian argument as to why this must happen; to substantiate my arguments, I will be quoting Rothbard’s Fifth Edition where relevant.
Before proceeding any further, I would urge all readers who haven’t read Rothbard’s “America’s Great Depression”, to pick up a copy and read it. First, it is a real pleasant read, and Rothbard’s witty style of writing makes reading it fun. Second, the first part of the book develops the Austrian Business Cycle Theory, which is indispensable for understanding credit booms and their inevitable busts. Finally, the second part of the book elaborates the development and the causes of the Inflationary Boom of the 1920s and provides a basis for comparison with the economic policies of modern-day China.
In order to establish our parallel, we need some historical perspective of the relationship between a world superpower and a rising economic giant. In the 1920s, Great Britain was the superpower of the world, and the United States was the rising giant. As such, Great Britain ran its economic policies independently, and the U.S. adapted its own policies in a somewhat subordinated manner. Today, The United States is the hegemonic superpower of the world, and China is the rising economic giant. Not surprisingly, the U.S. runs its policy independently, while China adjusts its own accordingly.
Continuing our parallel analysis, during the 1920s the British Empire was already in decline, was militarily overextended, and in order to pay for its imperial adventures, resorted to debasing its own currency and running continuous foreign trade and budget deficits. In other words, Britain was savings-short, a net-debtor nation, and the rest of the world was financing her. Meanwhile, America was running trade surpluses and was a net creditor nation. Importantly from a historical point of view, the British Empire collapsed when the rest of the world pulled the plug on their credit and began capital repatriation. Today, the American Empire is in decline, is militarily overextended, and is financing her overextended empire with the “tried-and-true” methods of currency debasement and never-ending foreign trade and budget deficits. In other words, America is savings-starved, a net-debtor nation, and the rest of the world is financing her. At the same time, today China runs trade surpluses and is a net-creditor nation. When the rest of the world finally pulls the plug on American credit, will the American Empire also collapse?
The cause of the Depression, as Rothbard explains, was a credit expansion that fuelled the boom. According to Rothbard, “[o]ver the entire period of the boom, we find that the money supply increased by $28.0 billion, a 61.8 percent increase over the eight year period [of 1921-1929]. This was an average annual increase of 7.7 percent, a very sible degree of inflation (p.93)…The entire monetary expansion took place in money substitutes, which are products of credit creation… The prime factor in generating the inflation of the 1920s was the increase in total bank reserves” (p.102). In other words, during the 1920s, the United States experienced an inflationary credit boom. This was most evident in the booming stock and the booming real estate markets. Furthermore, there was a “spectacular boom in foreign bonds… It was a direct reflection of American credit expansion, and particularly of the low interest rates generated by that expansion” (p.130). To stem the boom, the Fed attempted in vain to use moral suasion on the markets and restrain credit expansion only for “legitimate business. Importantly, consumer “prices generally remained stable and even fell slightly over the period” (p. 86). No doubt the stable consumer prices contributed to the overall sense of economic stability, and the majority of professional economists then did not realize that the economy was not fundamentally sound. To them the bust came as a surprise.
Today, in a similar fashion, the seeds of Depression are sown in China. Economists hail the growth of China, many not realizing that China is undergoing an inflationary credit boom that dwarfs that American one during the roaring ‘20s. According to official government statistics, 2002 Chinese GDP growth was 8%, and 2003 growth was 8.5%, and some analysts believe these numbers to be conservative. According to the People’s Bank of China own web site (http://www.pbc.gov.cn/english/baogaoyutongjishuju/), “Money & Quasi Money Supply” for 2001/01 was 11.89 trillion, for 2002/01 was 15.96 trillion, for 2003/01 was 19.05 trillion, and for 2004/01 was 22.51 trillion yuan. In other words, money supply for 2001, 2002, and 2003 grew respectively 34.2%, 19.3%, and 18.1%. Thus, during the last three years, money supply in China grew approximately three times faster than money supply in the U.S. during the 1920s.
No wonder the Chinese stock market has been booming and the Chinese real estate market is on fire. Just like the U.S. in the 20s, China finances today foreign countries, mostly the U.S., by buying U.S. government bonds with their trade surplus dollars. Just like the Fed’s failed attempts of moral suasion during the 20s, the Chinese government today similarly attempts in vain to curtail growth of credit by providing it only to those industries that need it, that is, only to industries that the government endorses for usually political reasons. Also, for most of the current boom, Chinese consumer prices have been mostly tame and even falling, while prices for raw commodities have been skyrocketing, which perfectly fits the Austrian view that prices of higher-order goods, such as raw materials, should rise relative to prices of lower-order goods, such as consumer goods. This indeed confirms that credit expansion has already been in progress for a considerable time, and that inflation now is in an advanced stage, although it has not yet reached a runaway mode. Thus, economic conditions in China today are strikingly similar to those in America during the 1920s, and the multi-year credit expansion implies that a bust is inevitable.
There are also important parallels regarding currency and export policy. During the 1920s, the British Pound was overvalued and was used by smaller countries as a reserve currency. While Britain ran its inflationary policies during the 1920’s, it was losing gold to other countries, mainly the United States. Therefore, “if the United States government were to inflate American money, Great Britain would no longer lose gold to the United States” (p. 143). Exacerbating the problem further, the Americans artificially stimulated foreign lending, which further strengthened American farm exports, aggravated the net-export problem, and accelerated the gold flow imbalances. “It [foreign lending] also established American trade, not on a solid foundation of reciprocal and productive exchange, but on a feverish promotion of loans later revealed to be unsound” (p. 139). “[President] Hoover was so enthusiastic about subsidizing foreign loans that he commented later that even bad loans helped American exports and thus provided a cheap form of relief and employment—a cheap form that later brought expensive defaults and financial distress” (p.141) Thus, the preceding discussion makes it clear, that the fundamental reasons behind the American inflationary policy were  to check Great Britain’s drains of gold to the United States,  to stimulate foreign lending, and  to stimulate agricultural exports.
Similarly, today the dollar is overvalued and used as the reserve currency of the world. The U.S. runs its inflationary policy and is losing dollars to the rest of the world, mainly China (and Japan). Today, the currency and export policy of China is anchored around its peg to the dollar. The main reason for this is that by artificially undervaluing its own currency, and therefore overvaluing the dollar, China artificially stimulates its manufacturing exports. The second reason is that by buying the excess U.S. dollars and reinvesting them in U.S. government bonds, it acts as a foreign lender to the United States. The third reason is that this foreign lending stimulates American demand for Chinese manufacturing exports and allows the Chinese government to relieve its current unemployment problems. In other words, the motives behind the Chinese currency and export policy today are identical to the American ones during the 1920s:  to support the overvalued U.S. dollar,  to stimulate foreign lending, and  to stimulate its manufacturing exports. Just like America in the 1920s, China establishes its trade today not on the solid foundation of reciprocal and productive exchange, but on the basis of foreign loans. No doubt, most of these loans will turn out to be very expensive because they will be repaid with greatly depreciated dollars, which in turn will exacerbate down the road the growing financial distress of the banking sector in China.
Therefore, it is clear that China travels today the road to Depression. How severe this depression will be, will critically depend on two developments. First, how much longer the Chinese government will pursue the inflationary policy, and second how doggedly it will fight the bust. The longer it expands and the more its fights the bust, the more likely it is that the Chinese Depression will turn into a Great Depression. Also, it is important to realize that just like America’s Great Depression in the 1930s triggered a worldwide Depression, similarly a Chinese Depression will trigger a bust in the U.S., and therefore a recession in the rest of the world.
Unless there is an unforeseen banking, currency, or a derivative crisis spreading throughout the world, it is my belief that the Chinese bust will occur sometime in 2008-2009, since the Chinese government will surely pursue expansionary policies until the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in China. By then, inflation will be most likely out of control, probably already in runaway mode, and the government will have no choice but to slam the brakes and induce contraction. In 1929 the expansion stopped in July, the stock market broke in October, and the economy collapsed in early 1930. Thus, providing for a latency period of approximately half a year between credit contraction and economic collapse, based on my Olympic Games timing, I would pinpoint the bust for 2009. Admittedly, this is a pure speculation on my part; naturally, the bust could occur sooner or later.
While I base my timing of bust on the 2008 Olympic Games, Marc Faber, the foremost Austrian authority in the world on Chinese economic development, believes that the bust will occur sooner. According to him, the U.S. is due for a meaningful recession relatively soon, which in turn will exacerbate already existing manufacturing overcapacities in China. This, coupled with growing credit problems, makes him believe that China will tip into recession sooner than the Olympic Games. In other words, Dr. Faber believes that a U.S. recession will trigger the Depression in China. Indeed, that very well may be the trigger, but if so, it still remains to be seen whether the Chinese government will let the bust run its course or choose the route of a “crack-up” boom, come hell or high water.
We should also consider another possible trigger for a bust, namely trade surpluses turning into trade deficits due to the accelerated rise of prices for resources, such as commodities, which China must import. Faced with trade deficits, China may decide to dishoard surpluses by selling U.S. government bonds, or it may decide to abandon its peg to the dollar. In either case, this will exacerbate the problems of the ailing U.S. economy, which in turn will boomerang back to China.
Finally, the bust may be triggered by a worldwide crisis in crude oil supplies. Peak oil supply is around the corner, if not already behind us, and Middle East or Caspian instability could sharply cut oil supplies. Historically, oil shortages and their concomitant rise of oil prices have always induced a recession. China’s growing dependence on oil ensures that should an oil crisis occur, it will slip into recession.
To summarize, the likely candidates for a trigger to the Chinese depression are  a worldwide currency, banking, or derivatives crisis,  a U.S. recession,  the containment of runaway inflation,  the disappearance of Chinese trade surpluses, and  an oil supply crisis.
Whatever the trigger of the bust in China, there is little doubt that this will provide the onset of a worldwide depression. Just like the U.S. emerged from the Great Depression as the unrivalled superpower of the world, so it is likely that China will emerge as the next

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I will learn to tolerance and not cry

October 13th 2008

I will learn to tolerance and not cry

  something might be occur when I was’t feel it ,in my opinion ,it was’t my fault ,but I had to make apologizes, I felt very sad ,so I cry,but let my good friends know ,they were very sad too ,I was very sorry ,I didn’t want them know ,through this matter I learn that I should learn to tolerance ,in the future ,there has many things like these ,so I should learn how to deal with .
  I also know ,when you cry nobody can help you ,so you deal with it only by yourself ,meanwhile your friends also very sad ,so I should learn to become brave.

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live and learn

October 13th 2008

live and learn

The time flows so fast especially this week.Two days out of office for business with my manager,when I came back Shanghai the result is that extremely busy.At the weekend one day for my BF,half day for work another half day for break,my godness,how can that enough to me.I need break!!!!!A longer holiday!!!
Suddenly the work report occured to me.Three days ago my work report was missing because the software office 2003 in my computer had a big problem which can not save the files.The god made a fun of me,kicked me in my head and he knew I am not good at writing so I started to fight,fight for the money.
At night, I stare into the light to kill some of my pain.it was all in vain cause no sense remain,but I will be fine because I am Nicle I am not a child anymore.I live and I learn,if you live you will learn to grow up.
Finnally wish I can learn my French well.Fighting~

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Learn to cherish

October 13th 2008

Learn to cherish

Have I whether be or not promised very quickly? After promising, I believe self will be very happy, but am not such but,You are fond of a low tone , I am the high-sounding words person but, that we have a lot of place is different,Know you are very careful , make me affected very much , dodge to I think that you have good faith very much before what , I have not promised you.But you let my feel like not have a sense of security very much but now,as if being able to lose one kind at any time, I unable to guess what are you thinking of.The people whether be or not is in do not understand that afterwards, right away be going to cherish well?We have already missed an once , I have not wanted to have missed any more..
        We, all ought to want to cherish well!

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Learn on me

October 13th 2008

Learn on me

Sometimes in our lives we all have pain,we all know
But if we are wise,we konw that there’s always tomorrow.
Learn on me when you’re not strong
 and I’ll be your friend ,I’ll help you carry on
For it won’t be long, till I’m going to need
Somebody to learn on.
 
Please swallow your pride if I have faith you need to borrow
For no one can fill those of your needs that you won’t let show.
You just call on me ,brother ,when you need a hand
We all need somebody to learn on,
I juest might have a problem that you’ll understand
We all need someone to learn on. 
Hero

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Identifying Goal

October 13th 2008

Identifying Goal

If you have a dream,
Identify it in your heart deeeply.
Then, there is a clear goal in your mind.
In order to achieve the goal,
Lots of ways, you can choose.
By plane, train, car, even a bike.
Which means you will take,
Depend on your preference.

Though you want to take a plane sometimes,
For it may save your time,
Humble purse fights you back.
In contrast,
At beginning, you might take a bike leisurely,
Having to change into a train reluctantly
In the middle of the journey.

The life is the same as the journey.
You could not choose a way arbitraryly,
On the road toward your goal.
But, never mind!

Tough you could not chose the ways by yourself,
Which head the final destination.
The dream has been identified in your heart.
No matter who are you,
The final destination will be reached.
Actually, this is the truth of the dream.
Hence, for the reason of success,
Let’s keep the goal in mind, never forget!

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Lovely Chilli

October 13th 2008

Lovely Chilli

Monday ,october 6
     What is the most unforgettable part about your hometown in your memory? Of course, it must be the local delicious food. For food is a major part of a culture, different nations, communities, and societies may has very different kinds of food. Some like hot food, others prefer to mild food. However, there is a food, or specifically, a kind of vegetable favorited by  people all around the world.
     It is chilli. Perhaps you may feel hot when  you comes to the word or the lovely vegetable. Sure, it’s red, red color and hot, hot taste might defeat many people who are less courage to have a try. Yet, just for such a sexy appearance and hot taste, it has become the role or minor role of the household dishes
     People like to eat it for it can open their stomatch . For example, there is a delicious food in my hometown, called luo si fen(cooked by snail with green vegetables and noodle). The mian material of the food is chilli. The food is very popular in the city, for its hot taste, red color and good smell. Before the food being put in front of you, the good smell of snail and sour bamboon have spreaded into your nose, and make your mouth water. Until a bowl of luosi fen finally put in fore of you, the red color of chilli may arouse your appetite very much. Then you could swallow your food in just few minute. And then, your eyes and nose will shed water for the very hot chilli.
     In fact, i could not eat the food in such a way when i lived in the city many years ago. The main reason was not for the hot taste, but the concern about my behavior. I would not like to be a water woman in public, though it would be very satisfied to eat like that way. However, it did not mean i would be more graceful at my own home.
     I was grew up in a village where the poeple lived a poor life many years ago. The houshold dishes they ate were humble vegetables and rice. Yet they needed much more energy to work hard at their farmings. So, in order to open their stomach , hot chilli became the role of their daily dishes.  The hot taste also made them more tough and unrestrained. My family also cooked chilli nearly everyday in my memory. I recalled i would become more happy and appetited when a bowl of chilli put on the table. In order to make it more delicious, my mother may cook it in various ways. So we would not be bored with the humble food everyday .
    Even today, a red chilli makes rouse my appetite. I would cook it with other vegetables sometimes, but it could no longer have the taste made by my mother indeed. Oh, lovely chilli, you are always the main role in my heart.

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Fonterra’s Sanlu recalls milkpowder after babies sick

September 16th 2008

The discovery of Chinese babies falling ill with kidney stones consumed milkpowder sold by Fonterra-controlled Sanlu Group is starting to have repercussions outside China.
The United States Food and Drug Administration has warned consumers to avoid infant formula from China, and New Zealand food safety officials are checking dairy products sent from China, even though no infant formula is imported.
China’s Health Ministry today ordered a nationwide probe of milkpowder linked to the rash of kidney stones in infants, and one death.
“Those responsible will face serious punishment,” said a ministry spokesman, Mao Qunan, quoted by the official Xinhua News Agency.
In seven provinces, hundreds of babies have been reported ill with kidney stones, and most of those babies are said to have been drinking Sanlu milkpowder.
Reports quoted doctors as saying many of the patients suffered from rare acute renal shutdown, an enlarged kidney and vomiting.
Sanlu has said some of its milkpowder was contaminated with melamine, a chemical used in plastics, which has previously been illegally used to boost perceived protein levels in standard tests for foods.
Asked yesterday what concern it had that its staff or workers for Sanlu might be prosecuted for any perceived role in the latest food safety scandal, Fonterra said: “It is not helpful to engage in speculation at this time”.
“The appropriate authorities need to get to the bottom of this issue first.”
Fonterra, which theoretically has control of Sanlu through its 43 percent shareholding, said today it was advised the company had a “quality issue in its products as a result of receiving defective milk in China”.
The company “has advised us that they have recalled product in China and have put new milk quality testing procedures in place”.
“We are pushing hard to make sure that Sanlu is working closely with the Chinese Government to ensure that everything that can be done, is being done.”
Sanlu, based in Shijiazhuang, a city southwest of Beijing, is China’s biggest producer of milkpowder - about 6800 tonnes a day or equivalent to 18 percent of the market, according to government data.
Xinhua and the official China Daily newspaper reported Sanlu had recalled 700 tonnes of the product.
Fonterra said it understands the contaminated product is only sold in China, though Sanlu exports a small amount to Taiwan.
Today, the New Zealand Food Safety Authority (NZFSA) announced it is testing infant formula sold here after the scare, and is looking at dairy produce imported from China.
NZFSA deputy chief executive Sandra Daly told NZPA customs records showed no New Zealand infant formula was imported from China, but it was going ahead anyway with testing the infant formula sold here.
“The first results are expected to be available early next week and will be published on the NZFSA website,” she said.
New Zealand imports small amounts of conventional dairy products such as milk, milkpowder and cheese from China, Ms Daly said.
Any products identified as containing Chinese dairy product are being tested.
China’s Health Ministry has warned mothers against feeding children Sanlu brand milkpowder, though it has not blocked its sale.
Fonterra has predicted that eventually China will account for 10 percent of its global dairy market.
It paid $NZ150 million - 864 million renminbi - for its stake in the Shijiazhuang Sanlu Group dairy company in December 2005.

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marriage

June 25th 2008

 Marriage is a most popular topic in any country for its importance to anybody. But it was not close to me when I was young so I didn’t care about it at that moment. As time goes by, I am growing up more and more.Marriage is not more than a irrelative title with me. So I really want to discuss it with all of you as followed.
Marriage is beautiful and important for any girl. We always compare loving with marriage. As a matter of fact, they are different perfectly.As we know, being with a man ,that is to say, carrying on a love affair is easy but with respect to the marriage not. The former is romantic as much as you can but the latter needs more responsibility. In addition, we girls can part with our boyfriends at ease but we can’t get divorced with our husbands casually because it involves a lot of things.
So we must take correct attitude to marriage. On one hand, Parents shouldn’t force their children to be married.Recently, one of my good friends was in trouble. Her mother always introduced some man to her for choosing future husband. She felt in animosity about it and didn’t match her mother even quarreling. In fact, I can understand the aunt’s action but I figured she should respect her daughter’s opinions at least. In deed, her daughter is old enough to consider her all-life thing. However, it needs time and isn’t decided inadvertantly. For me, marriage is a very sacred thing during my life and I will be pretty severe to choose my future husband. By the way, my father is serious about my marriage so he never makes me hurry.
On the other hand, We ourselves must take marriage seriously.We’d better send us to a reliable and responsible man for future. So that we will get so-called happiness what we long for, I think. I always watched terrible marriage on TV and knew some miserable news from around. Those abnormal marriages destoryed women’s whole life and their next generations. Somebody said, marriage is our second life. That’s true. Hence , we never make the determination for not considering.
On the whole, marriage is such a significant stuff for us. Facing up to it, we should clean our eyes and make prudent decisions as much as we can. As long as we regard it carefully, we must gain happiness we desire, I promise.

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