The rise of China in one graph should make us tremble in fear - Page 2 - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

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#14981598
Rancid wrote:I think a lot of people also believe that even though the Chinese economic data is not 100% accurate, that it's probably close enough to the truth.

In reality, we don't need economic data to be 100% accurate. it just needs to be mostly accurate.

There is always errors in every kind of data and calculations. Even there are permissible errors in financial statements of companies. We are okay with this.

But you should understand that having a relative accurate number is one thing and having a complete fallacy is another thing. Chinese is the latter one.

China claims to make its statistical work in less than a month. Do you know what this mean? They say that they are collecting all datas related to economic activities of 1,5 billion people, analzing it and reporting it. Same process takes several months in Western countries whose populations are significantly less and where everything is digitalized.

I don't eat this.
#14981620
The US has China surrounded with bases and naval fleets, China is forced to prop up the dollar by buying US debt, and China is a giant labor camp for the US. The US is the 800 lb imperial gorilla and China is its bitch.

China: American Financial Colony or Mercantilist Predator?
It is, of course, a counter intuitive fact that China has been financially colonized by the United States. But why is this a fact? Simply because China has chained itself to the world dollar standard at a pegged undervalued exchange rate, choosing therefore to hold the exchange value of its trade surplus — that is, its official national savings — in U.S. dollar securities. It is true that the dollar-yuan strategy of America’s Chinese colony has helped to finance a generation of extraordinary Chinese growth. But China now holds more than 3 trillion dollars of official reserves and more than a trillion dollars in U.S. government securities. These Chinese dollar reserves directly finance the deficits of the American colonial center. This arrangement clearly resembles the imperial system of the late 19th century. The value of a British colony’s reserves were often held in the currency of the imperial center, then invested in the London money market. Thus, the colony’s reserves were entirely dependent on the stability of the currency of the colonial center. While China is America’s largest financial colony, most other developing countries are also bound to neo-colonial status within the reserve currency hegemony of the dollarized world trading system.

CHINA’S DOLARIZED monetary system reminds us of nothing so much as the historic colonial financial arrangements imposed by the later British Empire on India before World War I — India actually remaining a financial colony of England long after its independence in 1947. How did the sterling financial empire work? The imperial colony of India, beginning in the late 19th century, held its official Indian currency reserves (savings) in British pounds deposited in the English money market; independent developed nations at that time, like France and Germany, held their reserves in gold. That is, France, Germany, and the United States settled their international payment imbalances in gold — a non-national, common, monetary standard — holding their official reserves, too, in gold. But the London-based reserves of colonial India were held not primarily in gold, but in British currency, helping to finance not only the imperial economic system, but also the imperial banking system, imperial debts, imperial wars, and British welfare programs. Eventually, as we know, both the debt-burdened British Empire and its official reserve currency system collapsed.

For more than a generation now, a similar process has been at work in China. China is America’s chief colonial appendage. The Chinese work hard and produce goods. Subsidized by an undervalued yuan, they export much of their surplus production to America. But, like the Indians who were paid in sterling, the exports of Chinese colonials are substantially paid in dollars, not yuan — because bilateral and world trade, and the world commodities market, have been dollarized. And thus it may be said that the world financial system is today an unstable neo-colonial appendage of the unstable dollar.
https://spectator.org/37018_china-ameri ... -predator/
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