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1 Chinas Economy and the NPC Albert Keidel Senior Fellow, The Atlantic Council of the United States AKeidel@Keidel.us March 17, 2010 International Economics Program The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Washington, DC
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2 Annual GDP Growth and Inflation, 1980-2009
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3 Quarterly GDP Growth, Year-on-Year, 2008-09
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4 Quarter-on-Quarter, Seasonally Adjusted
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5 PBoCs Seasonal Adjustments Differ Some
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6 Even if Quarter-on-Quarter settles at 8% …
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7 … headline Year-on-Year growth looks too high.
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8 … and PBoC estimates make it look even higher.
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9 Quarterly Trade, 2009-2010
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10 Monthly Trade and Balances, 2009-2010 Feb.
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11 Growth: Domestic & Foreign Demand, 2008-09
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12 Quarterly GDP component growth and growth contributions
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13 Month-on-month CPI inflation is up … To an annualized 12-percent rate. How bad could this be? Maybe not bad.
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15 Is the RMB too low? … or too high?! After the euro fell in July, 2008 China decided not to let the RMB depreciate against the US$
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16 Foreign Surplus = Foreign Savings In economics -- this identity is always true … … but, which causes which? It is fashionable to say that the savings causes the surplus … but in Chinas case, this is doubtful.
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17 Exports – Imports = GDP – Domestic Demand Foreign Surplus = Foreign Savings Does GDP growth push up exports? … … or, does demand for exports pull up GDP? Lets focus on exports and GDP growth …
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18 Current Account Imbalances for the U.S., China and Rest of the World
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19 U.S. Consumer Credit and Current Account Balance
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20 Was this caused by the exchange rate?
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21 Where were the Surpluses? China is there too, but came to the party late …
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22 The End Thank you AKeidel@keidel.us
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