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  #1151 (permalink)  
Antiguo 27-dic-2010, 18:11
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En el WSJ parece que tienen ganas de fiesta

Stephens: China Joins the Axis of Evil - WSJ.com

y eso que parecia que en el eje del mal solo incluian a paises pequeños

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  #1152 (permalink)  
Antiguo 28-dic-2010, 12:48
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EEUU y China cooperarán en materia de seguridad y defensa

El Ministerio de Defensa Nacional de China ha anunciado que Robert Gates, secretario de Defensa de Estados Unidos, visitará China entre el 9 y el 12 de enero para intercambiar puntos de vista.........EEUU y China cooperarán en materia de seguridad y defensa
  #1153 (permalink)  
Antiguo 29-dic-2010, 11:15
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China instaura nuevas regulaciones para lograr una economía más ecológica

El país asiático ha señalado que va a fijar nuevas normas para que la industria del reciclaje de electrodomésticos sea más efectiva y utilice mejor sus recursos, con el objetivo de ....

  #1154 (permalink)  
Antiguo 31-dic-2010, 10:32
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El número de ricos en China aumenta un 16% interanual

En un estudio realizado por China Private Wealth publicado en la revista Forbes de China, se destaca que el número de “súper ricos” en la parte continental del país aumentará un 16% durante 2010 debido al auge de los mercados inmobiliarios y de los capitales.

Por su parte, el informe reúne a los individuos de alto patrimonio neto, como aquellos con al menos 10 millones de yuanes (1.5 millones de dólares) en activos disponibles para invertir.

El resto del estudio aquí: El número de ricos en China aumenta un 16% interanual
  #1155 (permalink)  
Antiguo 31-dic-2010, 12:55
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El número de ricos en China aumenta un 16% interanual

se destaca que el número de “súper ricos” en la parte continental del país aumentará un 16% durante 2010 debido al auge de los mercados inmobiliarios y de los capitales.

Vaya, donde había leído ya datos como esos hace poco? Déjame hacer memoria... Ah, si, fue en Irlanda por el 2005-2006...

En fin, la noticia del día:
China declara ilegal Skype - ElConfidencial.com
China declara ilegal Skype

Portaltic/EP - 31/12/2010

China continúa su cruzada para controlar Internet dentro de sus fronteras. Tras las censuras a Google y la prohibición de redes sociales como Facebook o Twitter, el gobierno chino ha aprobado una nueva ley que hará ilegal servicios de llamadas a través de Internet que no pasen por las operadoras chinas.

El movimiento "hará que servicios como Skype no estén disponibles en el país", ha informado el People's Daily, medio de comunicación del Partido Comunista. Es el último gran puñetazo de hierro encima de la mesa china, tras el cierre de los servidores de Google en el país hace unos meses, lo que desató un conflicto internacional.

De esta forma, aquellos servicios que pasen por otras manos que no sean las de las operadoras China Unicom y China Telecom han sido declarados proscritos en el país. Muchos usuarios ya están denunciando que no pueden descargar el programa, aunque otros aseguran poder seguir usándolo en Pekín.

Alternativa

En un comunicado recogido por The Telegraph, Skype ha dicho: "los usuarios en China aún pueden acceder a Skype a través de Tom Online, su 'partner' chino. La compañía no ha querido hacer declaraciones sobre lo que parece una certeza: que pronto será bloqueado en China como les ha ocurrido a otros gigantes online.

Sin embargo, el uso de Tom Online es una pobre solución para los usuarios chinos. Este servicio ha sido criticado habitualmente por supuestamente monitorizar los mensajes de los usuarios, especialmente cuando hacen mención a temas "sensibles" en el país.

En todo caso, la nueva regulación no es al 100% restrictiva para Skype y otros servicios similares. Según el medio británico, aunque el uso del programa entre ordenadores y líneas terrestres no se permitirá, sí que se podrán hacer por el momento comunicaciones entre ordenadores.

Una nueva mala noticia para Skype para finalizar el año, que recientemente sufrió un problema que dejó sin servicio a usuarios de todo el mundo y fue demandada por violación de patentes.

Ale, ahora que salgan otra vez los sinófilos antiamericanos del hilo diciendo que Skype es una herramienta esencial del demonio imperialista yankee y que el gobierno chino hace bien prohibiéndolo para no permitir que sus ciudadanos... eeehh... esto.... Pues no sé, ?para que puedan ponerse en contacto con gente de otros países para comerciar, hablar y demás? Que país de mierda, sólo les falta volver a destruir las naves, los disenhos y matar a los ingenieros para poder seguir controlando completamente a la poblacíon.. otra vez. En fin. Noticias como esta me hacen pensar que por mal que esté espanha, siempre hay sitios que caen aún más bajo.

Última edición por Serpiente_Plyskeen; 31-dic-2010 a las 14:17
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  #1156 (permalink)  
Antiguo 02-ene-2011, 15:58
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Bueno pues Feliz 2011... el anyo del Chinacrash???

In the first 11 months this year, payments from the Mainland to Hong Kong amounted to RMB 180 billion while payments from Hong Kong to the Mainland amounted to RMB 50 billion, resulting in a net inflow of RMB 130 billion to Hong Kong. These RMB funds remain in Hong Kong and constitute a main source of supply in the local RMB market.

Finally, to further promote the development of the RMB offshore business in Hong Kong, the HKMA is making preparations for overseas roadshows with the financial industry, focusing on locations which have growing trade and investment flows with the Mainland. We believe that with our joint efforts, Hong Kong will be able to play its role as an RMB offshore market to the fullest, thereby promoting and supporting the nation’s increasing cross-border trade and investment activities while enhancing and consolidating the status of Hong Kong as an international financial centre.

http://www.bis.org/review/r101231b.pdf
  #1157 (permalink)  
Antiguo 02-ene-2011, 18:48
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Vaya, donde había leído ya datos como esos hace poco? Déjame hacer memoria... Ah, si, fue en Irlanda por el 2005-2006...

En fin, la noticia del día:
China declara ilegal Skype - ElConfidencial.com

Ale, ahora que salgan otra vez los sinófilos antiamericanos del hilo diciendo que Skype es una herramienta esencial del demonio imperialista yankee y que el gobierno chino hace bien prohibiéndolo para no permitir que sus ciudadanos... eeehh... esto.... Pues no sé, ?para que puedan ponerse en contacto con gente de otros países para comerciar, hablar y demás? Que país de mierda, sólo les falta volver a destruir las naves, los disenhos y matar a los ingenieros para poder seguir controlando completamente a la poblacíon.. otra vez. En fin. Noticias como esta me hacen pensar que por mal que esté espanha, siempre hay sitios que caen aún más bajo.

Está claro que China les encanta por el doble sistema, uno totalitario con el que no conviene enemistarse puesto que ofrece un espacio libre al anarcocapitalismo donde este puede desentenderse de derechos (rigideces) así como del absurdo compromiso/pacto social.

No hay que desgranar mucho con los fanboy de la china, enseguida se les ve el plumero cuando empiezan a argumentar que la democracia no es necesaria para el desarrollo económico ,eso si, siempre omitiendo la palabra Social, o incluso llegan a decir que es una cuestión antropocéntrica incompatible fuera de occidente, etc. etc.

El problema reside en el dogmatismo, en las estructuras inmóviles y opacas, tanto mentales como sociales. Es imposible entender el proceso democrático si no se le atribuye su esencia evolutiva de constante cambio y en constante construcción. No tiene una conclusión, un lugar al que llegar y vencer.
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  #1158 (permalink)  
Antiguo 02-ene-2011, 18:51
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China planea fomentar el diseño y la innovación en su economía para dejar de limitarse a producir lo que otros diseñan o simplemente copiarles.
When Innovation, Too, Is Made in China
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/02/bu...e&ref=business


AS a national strategy, China is trying to build an economy that relies on innovation rather than imitation. Clearly, its leaders recognize that being the world’s low-cost workshop for assembling the breakthrough products designed elsewhere — think iPads and a host of other high-tech goods — has its limits.

So can China become a prodigious inventor? The answer, in truth, will play out over decades — and go a long way toward determining not only China’s future, but also the shape of the global economy.

Clues to the Chinese approach emerge from a recent government document containing goals for drastically increasing the nation’s production of patents. It offers a telling glimpse of how China intends to engineer a more innovative society.

The document, published in November by the State Intellectual Property Office of China, is called the “National Patent Development Strategy (2011-2020).” It discusses broad economic objectives as well as specific targets to be attained by 2015.

In a recent interview, David J. Kappos, director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, pointed to the Chinese targets for 2015 and called them “mind-blowing numbers.”

According to a translation of the document provided by the patent office, China’s goal for annual patent filings by 2015 is two million. That number includes “utility-model patents,” which typically cover items like engineering features in a product and are less ambitious than “invention patents.” In the American system, there are no utility patents.

In 2009, about 300,000 applications for utility patents were filed in China, roughly equal to its total of invention patents, which have been growing slightly faster than utility filings in recent years. But even if just half of China’s total filings in 2015 are for invention patents, the national plan calls for a huge leap, to one million, by 2015. By contrast, patent filings in the United States totaled slightly more than 480,000 in the 12 months ended in September, according to the patent office.

China’s patent surge has been evident for years. In October, Thomson Reuters issued a research report, forecasting that China would surpass the United States in patent filings in 2011. “It’s happening even faster than we expected,” said Bob Stembridge, an intellectual-property analyst at Thomson Reuters.

Yet if the trend is not surprising, the ambition of the Chinese plan is striking. The document indicates, for example, that China intends to roughly double its number of patent examiners, to 9,000, by 2015. (The United States has 6,300 examiners.)

China also wants to double the number of patents that its residents and companies file in other countries. Recent Chinese filings in the United States, Mr. Kappos says, are mainly in fields that China has declared priorities for industrial strategy, including solar and wind energy, information technology and telecommunications, and battery and manufacturing technologies for automobiles.

To lift its patent count, China has introduced an array of incentives. They include cash bonuses, better housing for individual filers and tax breaks for companies that are prolific patent producers.

“The leadership in China knows that innovation is its future, the key to higher living standards and long-term growth,” Mr. Kappos says. “They are doing everything they can to drive innovation, and China’s patent strategy is part of that broader plan.”

China’s strategy is guided and sponsored by the state. Should that be a source of concern for the United States, and perhaps a trade issue? Or is the plan likely to resemble past efforts by other governments to give their companies an edge in global competition?

In the 1980s, the Japanese government was widely viewed as the master practitioner of industrial policy, and Japan Inc. seemed poised to overrun one American industry after another, including computers.

As we know, it didn’t turn out that way, partly because of steps taken by the American government and industry. A semiconductor trade agreement was intended to pry open the Japanese market, and I.B.M. invested in a crucial but then-struggling supplier, Intel.

More important, however, Japan never became a force in a particularly unruly, imaginative side of computing: writing software. Generalizations are risky, but it seems that Japan, as a society, has not produced enough of that kind of innovative skill, despite being a formidable patent generator. (In that area, Japan is still slightly ahead of the United States by some measures, though Japan’s patent filing pace is slowing.)

To call Japan’s industrial policy an outright failure would be simplistic. In some industries — autos, machine tools and consumer electronics, for example — it has done quite well.

“They are still in the game in those industries and going gangbusters — and we are not,” said Clyde V. Prestowitz Jr., president of the Economic Strategy Institute and a former United States trade negotiator. Still, just how strong a hand government policy had in those successes is open to debate.

The Chinese patent strategy document is filled with metrics, right down to goals for patents owned per million people. It speaks of an innovation-by-the-numbers mentality, much like a student who equates knowledge with scores on standardized tests.

“It is a brute-force approach at this stage, emphasizing the quantity of innovation assets more than the quality,” said John Kao, an innovation consultant to governments and corporations.

But it would be a mistake, Mr. Kao said, to assume that China will necessarily follow a path similar to Japan’s. China, he says, is not only much bigger than Japan, but it also has a more individualistic entrepreneurial society, despite its Communist government. Someday, he predicts, China will have its entrepreneurial equivalents of Steven P. Jobs and Mark Zuckerberg.

DESPITE China’s inevitable rise, Mr. Kao said, the United States has a comparative advantage because it is the country most open to innovation. “American culture, more than any other, forgives failure, tolerates risk and embraces uncertainty,” Mr. Kao says.

Many innovative products and technologies, he says, will be made elsewhere. “But America’s future lies in being the orchestrator — the systems integrator — of the innovation process,” Mr. Kao said. “Look at Silicon Valley. It is a place where smart people from all nations, all languages and all ethnic groups come together. It’s the capital of innovation assembly.”

  #1159 (permalink)  
Antiguo 14-ene-2011, 21:57
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Y luego Xiao Fu es fansboy ¿Y lo del señor Arvind Subramanian qué es?

Is China Already Number One? New GDP Estimates
by Arvind Subramanian | January 13th, 2011 | 05:11 pm

When the presidents of China and the United States meet next week in Washington, neither will likely be aware that, measured in terms of purchasing power, it is Hu Jintao not Barack Obama who represents the world’s largest economy. Some time in 2010, the Chinese economy overtook that of the United States. My calculations of GDP for 2010—which of course are subject to the uncertainty associated with all such exercises—are based on new estimates of GDP that will soon be published by the Penn World Tables (PWT) under the guidance of Professor Alan Heston at the University of Pennsylvania.

Cross-country comparisons of economic size and standards of living of the average citizen rely on two approaches. The first uses market exchange rates to convert the economic value of goods and services produced around the world into a common currency, usually the dollar. According to the IMF’s latest estimates for 2010, the value of total US GDP was $14.6 trillion while that of China was $5.7 trillion.

But it has long been recognized by many economists that using the market exchange rate to value goods and services is misleading about the real costs of living in two countries. Such goods and services as medical services, retail and constructions services, and haircuts—which are not traded across borders—are cheaper in poorer countries because labor is abundant. Using the market exchange rate to compare living standards across countries understates the benefits that citizens in poor countries enjoy from having access to these goods and services.

Purchasing power parity (PPP) estimates—which take account of these differing costs—are an alternative and, in some respects, more revealing way of computing and comparing standards of living and economic size across countries. These estimates have been published periodically in the Penn World Tables since 1970.1 My calculations (explained in greater detail below) based on the most recent version, which is due in early February, show that the size of the Chinese economy in 2010 was about $14.8 trillion dollars—surpassing that of the United States.

How do I obtain this number?

The IMF has produced its own PPP-based estimates for 2010 (published in the World Economic Outlook in October 2010). But these are problematic in two important respects for China: The GDP number for 2005, which is the starting point for all the PPP-based calculations, is understated, and the price increases between 2005 and 2010 are overstated, which further reduces the GDP number for 2010. Consider each.

When the World Bank published its PPP-adjusted estimates for GDP per capita based on disaggregated data collected by the International Comparison of Prices (ICP) project exercise in 2005, a number of commentators expressed doubts about them, especially because the estimates for China ($4,091 per capita) and India ($2,126) were revised downward by 40 percent relative to the pre-ICP estimates. The IMF uses this lower number for 2005.

Surjit Bhalla (2008) argued that the number for China was unrealistic. Suppose, he said, the revised number was extrapolated backward, using China’s growth rate between 1952 and 2004 of 5.52 percent. It would imply a level of GDP per capita in 1952 of $153 (in 1985 prices) that was well below the threshold value of $250 that Pritchett (1997) has argued is the minimum required for subsistence. In Bhalla’s evocative de******ion, the revisions meant that there were few living Chinese in 1952.

The validity of doing this backward extrapolation is questionable because, as I pointed out in a paper with Simon Johnson and colleagues (2009), PPP growth rates and market exchange rate-based growth rates are not identical and cannot be used interchangeably.

Nevertheless, Bhalla’s point is correct, albeit for slightly different reasons as argued by Deaton and Heston (2010). They suggest that China’s PPP-GDP was underestimated (by the ICP project and by the World Bank) because of the urban bias of the price sampling in ICP 2005. Data on prices were collected for 11 cities and their surroundings but no rural prices—which are typically substantially below urban prices—were collected (or rather allowed to be collected by the Chinese authorities).

The latest version of the Penn World Tables (version 7 to be released in early February 2011) have corrected these biases, which result in an upward revision for China’s PPP-based GDP by about 27 percent and for India by about 13 percent for the year 2005. I use the new PWT corrections as the starting point for computing new estimates for PPP-based GDP and GDP per capita.

A second correction relates to developments between 2005 and 2010. For this period, if the IMF data are taken at face value, they suggest an increase in the real cost of living in China relative to that in the United States (which is equivalent to a real appreciation of the Chinese currency) of about 35 percent.2 This seems implausible because three alternative ways of assessing currency changes point to a much smaller appreciation.

First, most real exchange rate indices computed for China (for example those of JPMorgan and the Bank for International Settlements) point to an appreciation during this period of between 12 and 20 percent. Analysis of productivity differentials between China and its trading partners, and between tradable and nontradable sectors within China, by the IMF in its 2010 Article IV consultation (p. 19) would also imply an appreciation of the yuan of no more than 10 to 15 percent.3 Third, one could ask what currency appreciation would be implied for China if it behaved like the average country: For this country, estimates suggest that currency appreciation responds to the difference between its own growth rate of per capita GDP and that of the United States (in the jargon, this is called the dynamic Balassa-Samuelson effect). This procedure also yields estimates of about 10-15 percent for Chinese currency appreciation.4

If a currency appreciates, the movement is akin to an increase in the average cost of living. So taking 15 percent as the best estimate of the currency appreciation, rather than the 35 percent estimated by the IMF, requires adjusting China’s 2010 GDP upward by 20 percent (because the increase in the cost of living has been overstated by 20 percent). To be conservative, I have not adjusted GDP up by the entire 20 percent.

These two adjustments increase China’s GDP from the current estimate of $10.1 trillion to $14.8 trillion (an increase of 47 percent, of which 27 percent is due to the revision in the 2005 estimate, and the rest due to smaller-than-assumed increases in the cost of living between 2005 and 2010). This $14.8 trillion figure exceeds US GDP of $14.6 trillion. It must be emphasized, of course, that the difference is small enough to be within the margin of error.5

Applying the same adjustments to GDP per capita increases the estimate for China from $7,518 (the current estimate in the IMF’s World Economic Outlook) to $11,047. The GDP per capita (the average standard of living) is now about 4.3 times greater in the US than in China compared with a multiple of 6.3 without my corrections (and compared with a multiple of 11 if GDP is computed using market exchange rates).

One interesting question is why China did not allow more representative prices to be collected as part of the ICP project in 2005. Professor T. N. Srinivasan of Yale University has long argued that China likes to exaggerate its growth rate (to showcase its strength and dynamism) and simultaneously understate its level of GDP (being seen to be poorer may have advantages internationally, such as not being expected to contribute financially to global institutions or global public goods). Overstating prices has the effect of understating GDP, and thus helps achieve this objective.

Perhaps a more important explanation of China’s behavior has to do with exchange rate politics. Had all prices been collected, China’s average price level (cost of living) would have been substantially lower. And this would have resulted in estimates of undervaluation of the Chinese currency of close to 40 percent against the dollar (see Subramanian 2010 for the connection between China’s price level and the implications for estimating whether currencies are under or overvalued). China’s trading partners would have had additional technical ammunition to deploy against its highly sensitive but demonstrably beggar-thy-neighbor exchange rate policy.

References

Bhalla, Surjit. 2008. World Bank—Most Asians Dead in 1950. Business Standard (August 23).

Deaton, Angus, and Alan Heston. 2010. Understanding PPPs and PPP-based national Accounts. American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics 2, no. 4: 1–35.

Johnson, Simon, William Larson, Chris Papageorgiou, and Arvind Subramanian. 2009. Is Newer Better? Penn World Table Revisions and their Impact on Growth Estimates. National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper 15455. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.

Pritchett, Lant. 1997. Divergence, Big Time. Journal of Economic Perspectives 11(3): 3–17.

Srinivasan, T. N. 1994. Database for Development Analysis: An Overview. Journal of Development Economics 44(1): 3–27.

Subramanian, Arvind. 2010. New PPP-Based Estimates of Renminbi Undervaluation and Policy Implications. Peterson Institute for International Economics Policy Brief 10-8. Washington: Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Notes


1. The PPP-based estimates of the PWT have been an immeasurably valuable input in, and transformed, the study of economic development. The early authors of the PWT—Irving Kravis, Alan Heston, and Robert Summers (father of Larry Summers)—deserve recognition from the Nobel Committee for their unsexy but invaluable efforts in being the quiet bean counters who have provided the essential data for opening up a whole new field of inquiry into arguably the most pressing economic and moral issue of our time: promoting economic development.

2. The World Economic Outlook estimates the price level of China’s GDP (also the inverse of the real exchange rate) at 42 in 2005 and nearly 57 in 2010, representing a 35 percent real increase (the price level is always relative to the US base of 100).

3. Recall the basic theory, which says that exchange rates between two countries should move in line with productivity differentials between them or between tradable and nontradable sectors within a country. Total factor productivity growth differentials were about 15 percent for eight years or roughly 10 percent for the five-year period, 2005–10 for which we need to make the adjustment. Similarly, productivity in the tradable sector increased relative to that in the nontradable sector by 26 percent or roughly 15 percent for a five-year period.

4. China’s GDP per capita increased cumulatively by 66 percent and that of the United States by 5 percent. Applying this difference to a plausible Balassa-Samuelson coefficient of 0.2, yields an increase in the price level of China’s GDP of about 12 percent rather than the 35 percent assumed by the IMF.

5. In 2011, with China’s growth likely to substantially exceed that of the United States, the difference in their levels of GDP will likely move beyond error margins.

Realtime: Is China Already Number One? New GDP Estimates
__________________

Salvo excepciones, la democracia no ha dado buenos gobiernos a los países en desarrollo. Lo que más valoran los asiáticos no es necesariamente lo que valoran los americanos o europeos. Los occidentales valoran las libertades individuales. Como asiático de origen chino, mis valores son por un gobierno que es honesto, efectivo y eficiente. - Lee Kuan Yew.
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  #1160 (permalink)  
Antiguo 14-ene-2011, 22:03
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China planea fomentar el diseño y la innovación en su economía para dejar de limitarse a producir lo que otros diseñan o simplemente copiarles.



Veamos que son capaces de hacer. Hasta que no les deslocalizaron la producción occidente y así pudiero copiar,

¿que hacían 1100 millones produciendo menos PIB que España? ¿que hicieron los últimos 50 años más que comerse los mocos?

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