• mar_k [he/him]
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          1 year ago

          dont-laugh I love how some of the opening lines talks about interviewing a single Chinese person failing to run a business

          One entrepreneur interviewed by The Wall Street Journal said that one of his businesses, a distributor for LED screens based in Shenzhen, is suffering from widening losses as overseas orders dry up, leading him to slash prices to compete for domestic clients. Having laid off more than 50 out of 120 staff since 2022, he said he is contemplating whether to shut the business this year.

      • YoungBelden [any]
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        351 year ago

        every accusation is an admission or whatever

        like whenever the us economy is booming because line go up, all while a few million people are housing/food unstable

      • @zephyreks@lemmy.ca
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        141 year ago

        Except official data doesn’t look good? They haven’t gaslit shit, they’ve been reporting slowing growth, decreasing exports, and deflation.

        WSJ literally wrote an article “this is what I think China will do and that’s why China bad”

        What the fuck kind of journalism is that?

          • Trudge [Comrade]
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            131 year ago

            It’s crazy how the real economy correlates with numbers in China. I’d love to live in a country like that.

        • geikei [none/use name]
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          261 year ago

          Export decrese is in line with almost every other east asian country and its very much so a “western economies go into recession and import less” problem. Groth slowing to ~5% is in line with what everyone is expected and China doesnt sweat too much about it. Its pretty solid especially since its higher quality. Deflation is only a problem if it persists for a long time and if it actualy spans in various types of commodities. If you exclude energy and housing everything else shows small inflation in China still and the real estate sector is going through tough but needed restructuring and regulation periods since last year. Deflation introduced from that part of the economy is more or less a by product of them deleveraging the sector and bursting some bubbles

    • happyandhappy [she/her]
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      1 year ago

      he’s probably referring to this https://thenextrecession.wordpress.com/2023/08/02/china-consumption-or-investment/

      tldr chinas quarterly growth has slowed and liberal economists are claiming china’s miracle is over. private sector investment has shrank 0.2% for the first time since data collection in 2005 but investment by state firms has expanded 8.1% in the same period. there’s also a current global manufacturing recession. doesnt mean “its over” or whatever tf they’re saying but interesting to note.

      https://www.reuters.com/markets/global-economy-asias-factory-activity-shrinks-chinas-slump-global-slowdown-weigh-2023-08-01/

      • uralsolo [he/him]
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        1 year ago

        I mean there will be a point when the Chinese middle class stops growing and the government will need to midwife a new economic model. A Communist Party is probably the only political organization currently in the world that can come up with an answer that isn’t slashing the social safety net and giving big handouts to corporations to keep profits up, though.

        • happyandhappy [she/her]
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          251 year ago

          im not an expert in political economy, but if you read the article he goes into a lot of specific reasons why china is still in a great position in regards to the future, although it will take responsible leadership that pushes back against mainstream neoclassical economics.