Bloodsuckers take over the world
By
Bill Bonner Mar 05, 2010
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The world's largest shopping mall is almost entirely empty, says a headline now making its way around the internet. The mall is not one of America's consumer emporia. It's not in the US at all. It is in the Middle Kingdom... and twice as large as the "Mall of the Americas".
The world did not end in 2009. Two things are widely reported to have saved it – stimulus in the West and China in the East. Harvard economist Robert Barro, writing in The Wall Street Journal, considered the effect of stimulus spending on the US economy. The US government's 2009 programme was originally expected to cost $787bn. Now it is estimated to come in with a final price tag of $862bn. What do you get for that kind of money, he wondered? The initial spending seems to work, since the government is spending without raising taxes to pay for it. But the money must come from somewhere. Tax receipts inevitably have to go up. Both spending and taxing are subject to "multipliers", says Barro. He calculates that each dollar of public stimulus spending has a net cost of $1.50 in foregone private spending. A "bad deal... there's no such thing as a free lunch", even in fiscal stimulus, he concludes.
Stimulus spending is a net negative in the US; what about in China? The China story is largely a stimulus story too. China's stimulus, compared to GDP, is the world's largest ever – four times the size of America's stimulus programme. When bank loan volume is determined by central planners, you are asking for trouble. But last year, faced with a downturn in demand from their main customer, the Chinese authorities put out the word to banks – increase loans. Loan volume approximately doubled – to $1.4trn – the greatest increase, in GDP terms, ever – equal to a quarter of the entire national output.
Investment spending has long been an oversize part of the Chinese economy. As Americans spent too much, the Chinese invested too much in factories in order to make them things they could buy – just as the Japanese had done before them. Investment spending in China increased 200% since 2001, making it the world's biggest buyer of raw materials. Chinese output is less than 10% of the world's total. But China consumes 30% of the world's aluminum, 40% of its copper and 47% of its steel. Where does all this stuff go? Thanks to China's visionary central planners, it goes just where it is not needed most – into more infrastructure and output capacity. Last year, 90% of China's growth came from this fixed investment spending.
There are about five times as many rivers in the US and five times as many cars. But China now has nearly as many bridges and three quarters as much road surface. With easy credit, the connivance of local officials, and the blessing of the central government, it builds even more. Last year, roughly one in four square feet of commercial office space in Beijing was empty: about 100 million square feet of zombie space. All over town are dark buildings... the Minsheng Financial Center... concrete and glass towers on Financial Street... the China Life Plaza... Bank of Communications.
This year, the vacancy rate will go up to 30%, possibly 50%, depending on whose estimates you believe. In Eastern Beijing, officials are doubling the size of the Central Business District, even though the vacancy rate there is above 35%. Overall, the city will add another 13 million square feet of commercial space.
Outside Beijing, the zombies multiply too. Whole cities are empty. In the suburbs of Huairou, a mock alpine village with a 200ft clock tower rises improbably in the industrial suburbs. Called the "Spring Legend", its publicists must be the same people who write fortune cookie forecasts: "The air is so fresh it penetrates your heart." You would normally dismiss such descriptions as puffery. But in China's industrial suburbs, the air is often so acid that it might penetrate the skull too.
National politicians determine the availability of capital. Local ones have a hand in 'investing' it. Development projects involve bankers, developers, and local politicians – much like Japan's huge public works projects of the past 20 years. Local governments are deep in debt with total local government debt equal to about a third of GDP. But they keep spending. In Huaxi, for example, they're still planning to build the world's second-tallest building, a few feet shorter than Dubai's pyhrric monument. Huaxi is also the home of the New Sky Village, another project that is lost in the toxic clouds.
Property prices are still spiking up. People are still speculating. Ships with dirt and rocks still head for Chinese ports. The capital spending boom goes on. It looks like growth. But it is zombie growth. People build bridges to nowhere rather than working for profit-making enterprises. Concrete is used to put up cities where no one lives. Savings that might have been used to start a new bank instead prop up an old one. Japan has been doing it for years. Encouraged by government miscues in the 1980s, private industry created Japan's zombies. Then, after the bubble burst, the government kept them alive. They've been sucking blood from the living ever since.
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