Dean Baker's take on the story:

"The NYT reports that strong demand is causing wages to rise rapidly
in China. While the article describes this as a "labor shortage," this
is actually a normal process in a growing economy. Workers move from
less productive sectors to more productive sectors. Firms that cannot
afford to pay the market wage go out of business.

"At the end of the article, the NYT notes that China may revalue the
yuan as one mechanism for offsetting the inflation caused by the rise
in wages. It then cites Jing Ulrich, the chairwoman of China equities
and commodities at J. P. Morgan: "Letting wages rise benefits workers,
... letting the currency rise benefits currency speculators."

"Actually, workers would benefit from a rise in the yuan also, since
they would be able to buy imported goods at lower prices. However,
letting the currency rise would make J.P. Morgan a relatively weaker
actor in China since most of its assets are in dollars. These dollars
would be worth less in China if the yuan rose in value."

On Sat, Feb 27, 2010 at 9:23 AM, Arthur Cordell <[email protected]> wrote:
> February 27, 2010  NY Times
>
> Defying Global Slump, China Has Labor Shortage





-- 
Sandwichman
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