Both are pushing through their "central command" inflationary policies that will drive up asset values - and both are succeeding. Only one country is admitting the issues this is causing, and it sure isn't us.
Via Bloomberg:
(1) Factory output
- China's factory output climbed 12.3 percent last month from a year earlier, the most since August 2008, the statistics bureau said yesterday.
- Retail sales, rose 15.4 percent, the biggest gain this year after accounting for seasonal distortions.
- M2, the broadest measure of money supply, expanded by a record 28.53 percent.
- China's exports fell more than economists estimated in August, weighing on government efforts to spur growth in the world’s third-largest economy.
- Exports slid 23.4 percent from a year earlier, the customs bureau said on its Web site today. That was the biggest drop in three months and compared with the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey for a 19 percent decline.
- Exports to the U.S. fell 21.8 percent in August from a year earlier, the biggest slide since China’s shipments began to contract in November, according to Bloomberg News calculations. ("strange" considering the green shoots exploding in the States)
- Exports to the European Union fell 26.6 percent. (similarly "strange")
- Imports fell 17 percent leaving a trade surplus of $15.7 billion.
- “Exports won’t truly recover unless China’s main trading partners such as the U.S. and Europe regain growth next year,” said Xing Ziqiang, an economist at China International Capital Corp. in Beijing. Trade “will continue to be a drag on the recovery,” he said.
- Exports fell for a 10th straight month. The decline in imports was the biggest in three months and more than economists estimated.
- Local-currency new loans were 410.4 billion yuan ($60 billion) in August, up from 355.9 billion yuan in July, the central bank reported.
- The reacceleration in credit growth may deepen concern among some observers at the danger of asset-price inflation.
- Bank of China Ltd. Vice President Zhu Min warned on Sept. 10: “The potential risk is that a lot of liquidity goes to the asset market,” Zhu said. “So you see asset bubbles in commodities, stocks and real estate, not only in China, but everywhere.”
It will not be too bad this year. Both China and America are addressing bubbles by creating more bubbles and we're just taking advantage of that. So we can't lose.
- Premier Wen said yesterday China “cannot and will not change the direction” of the government’s policies. His remarks reflect a commitment last week from the world’s biggest nations to maintain unprecedented fiscal and monetary measures to secure a recovery from the deepest recession since World War II.
[Aug 5, 2009: China's Provincial Growth Figures Far Overstated versus National Figures]






