Eurozone crisis live: Recession looms as private sector keeps shrinking

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2012/aug/23/eurozone-crisis-manufacturing-slowdown-merkel-hollande

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NY Times August 22, 2012
In Vietnam, Growing Fears of an Economic Meltdown
By THOMAS FULLER

HO CHI MINH CITY, Vietnam — Construction crews got as far as the first 
floor of what was to be Saigon Residence, a high-end apartment building 
in the center of Ho Chi Minh City. All that remains today of the 
abandoned project are piles of moldy bricks, rusting steel rods and a 
small team of security guards who have transformed the cement foundation 
into a parking lot for motorcycles.

In Vietnam’s major cities, a once-booming property market has come 
crashing down. Hundreds of abandoned construction sites are the most 
obvious signs of a sickly economy.

A senior Vietnamese Communist Party official, speaking in the ornate 
drawing room of a French colonial building, compared the country’s 
economic problems to the market crash 15 years ago that flattened many 
economies in Asia.

“I can say this is the same as the crisis in Thailand in 1997,” said Hua 
Ngoc Thuan, the vice chairman of the People’s Committee of Ho Chi Minh 
City, the city’s top executive body. “Property investors pushed the 
prices so high. They bought for speculation — not for use.”

Vietnam’s economic problems appear less severe than those of the 1997 
financial crisis — the economy is still growing, albeit relatively 
anemically, at a rate of about 4 percent — but the country’s list of 
problems continues to grow.

The arrest this week of Nguyen Duc Kien, one of Vietnam’s wealthiest 
businessmen, set off a 4.8 percent plunge in the country’s stock market 
index Tuesday, the biggest drop in four years. The charges against Mr. 
Kien are vague. The state news media said he was accused of illegal 
business activity.

The opaque way that his case is being handled underlines a key 
aggravating factor for the country’s woes: The awkward marriage between 
a secretive Communist Party leadership and a capitalist economy is 
clouding recovery prospects for the country of 91 million people.

Investors are skeptical of the government’s economic management and 
question the reliability of statistics. The country’s central bank says 
borrowers have stopped paying back 1 out of every 10 loans in the 
banking system, but Fitch Ratings said the percentage of bad loans might 
be much higher.

If the 1997 crisis was often blamed on “crony capitalism,” Vietnam’s 
problems could be described as crony capitalism with a communist twist. 
State-owned companies are stacked with friends and allies of the 
Communist Party hierarchy.

“The state is being manipulated by people within the state to make 
money,” said Jonathan Pincus, the dean of the Fulbright Economics 
Teaching Program in Vietnam.

“Getting the Communist Party out of the management of these companies, 
that’s what is required,” he said. “I don’t see that on the table.”

Like property bubbles in other parts of the world, investors in Vietnam 
took advantage of free-flowing credit to construct buildings with the 
hopes of flipping them for a profit. One key difference is that some of 
the largest property speculators in Vietnam are state-owned corporations 
with top connections in the Communist Party and access to cheap money. 
Those companies are now grappling with unsustainable debt levels, or in 
the case of Vinashin and Vinalines, two large government conglomerates, 
flirting with insolvency.

Ho Chi Minh City is still buzzing with energy, swarmed by tourists and 
plagued by traffic jams — all signs of the city’s economic vitality. But 
that masks the symptoms of the nationwide economic woes: Young people 
are finding it harder to find jobs; nearly 20 percent of small and 
medium-size companies have gone out of business during the past year; 
and municipal infrastructure projects are being delayed or canceled.

Le Dang Doanh, a prominent economist and a former top official at a 
government research organization, said he was worried about the timing 
of the country’s problems, coming just as the global economy is bogged 
down by debt and Europe grapples with the existential dilemma of the euro.

“The problem in Vietnam is a very, very toxic cocktail from the European 
debt crisis, the stagnation in the U.S. economy plus a very critical 
situation in the domestic economy,” Mr. Doanh said. “It’s a very 
dangerous mixture.”

The private sector is helping keep the economy moving — Vietnam is a 
major exporter of clothing and footwear to the United States — but 
foreign money flows have slowed. Commitments by foreign investors were 
$8 billion for the first half of this year, one-quarter the level during 
the same period three years ago.

The consequences of Vietnam’s economic problems are far-reaching. The 
revenues of municipal governments are shrinking across the country 
because property-transfer fees made up a large chunk of their income. Ho 
Chi Minh City’s first subway line is now scheduled for completion in 
2016, a year later than planned, according to Mr. Thuan, the Ho Chi Minh 
City senior official.

In the central city of Da Nang, which has thrived during the past 
decade, officials have been forced to cancel development projects on the 
outskirts of the city. Tran Van Son, the vice director of the Da Nang 
Department of Planning and Investment, said he was “very worried” that 
the city would have to scale back further because tax revenue was 
lagging even more than projected.

Young people are finding good jobs more elusive. On the outskirts of 
Hanoi, the capital, Nguyen Duy Huong, the 21-year-old son of rice 
farmers, spent the early part of the year searching in vain for work in 
computer repair shops.

“Every place I went to said they were looking for really strong 
technicians,” Mr. Huong said. “They weren’t taking interns.”

Like many other young people in Vietnam, Mr. Huong lives on the frontier 
between information technology and the peasant economy. He has worked 
part-time at a photo-printing shop, using software to whiten faces and 
remove blemishes, but his family’s main income comes from planting and 
harvesting rice by hand. In the quest for full-time work, he recently 
began taking software programming courses run by Reach, a nonprofit 
organization created by Plan International, a British charity.

The problems facing young people are nothing near the scale of the 
Spanish and Greek unemployment crises, but finding a job is no longer as 
automatic as a few years ago.

“Companies have more choices now,” said Nguyen Thi Van Trang, who helps 
run the training program. “They don’t have to take kids off the street 
anymore.”

The government has battled the country’s problems with classic 
macroeconomic tools: tightening the supply of money to choke off 
double-digit inflation and then slashing interest rates this year to 
energize the economy.

Yet banks remain very cautious, partly because of the growing number of 
customers unable to pay back their loans. The supply of credit in the 
economy is shrinking and consumption is flat; supermarkets, for example, 
have reported reductions in sales of 20 to 30 percent.

Mr. Doanh, the economist, said Vietnam needed much more than just an 
injection of money at lower interest rates.

The inefficient state-owned monoliths like Vinashin, which expanded 
wildly into businesses they were ill-qualified to operate, need to be 
dismantled, privatized or scaled down, Mr. Doanh said.

“Now is a good time for creative destruction,” he said, referring to the 
concept of established companies’ being replaced by more innovative 
competitors.

As in the United States, Vietnam’s return to economic health rides in 
part on the revival of the real estate market.

There is so much excess supply of office space in Ho Chi Minh City that 
rents in the most desirable neighborhoods are half the level of three 
years ago, said Nguyen Duy Lam, the director of Pacific Real, a 
construction and real estate company.

In the hopes of drawing more foreign buyers, officials in Ho Chi Minh 
City have submitted a formal proposal to the central government to open 
up the property market to overseas Vietnamese, according to Mr. Thuan, 
the Communist Party official.

For now, though, real estate agents like Mr. Lam report that activity is 
freezing up.

“Everyone wants to sell, but they can’t, even if they lower the price,” 
Mr. Lam said in an interview on the roof of a hotel in Ho Chi Minh City. 
“There are no customers.”

Mr. Lam is counting on the long-term prospects of the city. As he spoke, 
a contrasting picture of Vietnam emerged. The dark outlines of an 
unfinished skyscraper loomed overhead, but another construction site 
nearby was bucking the trend: On a Sunday evening, lit by floodlights, a 
crane swung back and forth as workers put up another building destined 
to fill out the skyline of Ho Chi Minh City.

---


NY Times August 23, 2012
Manufacturing in China Slows Further
By BETTINA WASSENER

HONG KONG — The Chinese economy, it seems, is stuck in a nasty rut.

A closely watched barometer of China’s economic performance — a monthly 
survey that measures the conditions in the giant manufacturing sector — 
slumped sharply in August, offering one of the earliest glimpses of how 
the month has been progressing. The prognosis, judging by a preliminary 
reading of the survey published Thursday, was poor.

The purchasing managers’ index, released by HSBC, sagged to 47.8 from 
49.3 in July, the lowest level since late last year. That dashed hopes 
that conditions in the sector would stabilize, or even edge up slightly, 
during August. Analysts described the reading as “disappointing,” 
“alarming” and “just awful.” A reading below 50 indicates contraction; 
above 50 indicates growth.

“The unexpectedly big drop more than reversed the gain seen in July,” 
Yao Wei, a China economist at Société Générale in Hong Kong, said in a 
research note. “A drop of this magnitude and a level significantly below 
50 unambiguously spells trouble.”

The Chinese economy has been languishing for months, its domestic 
performance undermined by weakness in the important property sector and 
its export sector hit by sagging demand from overseas.

Growth in the United States remains anemic, while the festering debt 
crisis in Europe has weighed heavily on a part of the world that is a 
key destination for Chinese goods. Data from Europe released Thursday 
underlined the retrenchment there: A business survey reinforced 
expectations that the euro zone was already in recession and that the 
economic powerhouse of Germany was less and less able to prop up the 
rest of the region.

The drawn-out woes have gradually rippled around the globe, undermining 
the growth momentum of once-buoyant economies like China. Exports have 
been slowing for months, and in July they edged up a mere 1 percent, 
official statistics this month showed.

And although the economy has by no means come to a complete standstill, 
slowing growth is showing through in the form of disappointing earnings.

On Thursday, Li Ning, one of China’s best-known sportswear retailers, 
and Ajisen, a restaurant chain, reported steep slides in sales and 
earnings during the first half of this year. And in the financial 
sector, Bank of China reported net income for the April-June quarter of 
34.8 billion renminbi, or $5.48 billion. Although that was a 5.3 percent 
increase from a year earlier, the pace of growth was the slowest since 2009.

At the same time, the waning momentum in China is eroding the country’s 
ability to drive growth in the rest of the world.

Qantas, the Australian airline, canceled a major plane order Thursday 
after reporting a loss for the year that ended in June. Its chief 
executive, Alan Joyce, cited the “uncertain global context” for the 
decision not to go ahead with the purchase of 35 Boeing Dreamliner jets.

Similarly, slowing demand for raw materials from China prompted the 
Australian mining giant BHP Billiton to delay major investment projects 
on Wednesday.

“That’s two Australian economic icons making retrenchments in the space 
of two days,” said Glenn Maguire, senior economist at Asia Sentry 
Advisory, a research consulting firm in Sydney. “The slowdown in China 
appears to be much broader and durable than people had expected even 
just a few weeks ago.”

What is more worrying, analysts said, is that the poor global backdrop 
heralds more pain to come for China, which despite its slowing growth 
remains a major growth engine for the global economy.

The slump in the purchasing managers’ reading Thursday “confirmed that 
China’s slowdown has yet to abate, with a growing risk of further 
intensification,” Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at HSBC, said in a 
research note.

New export orders, which are also captured in HSBC’s survey, declined 
sharply, indicating that Chinese exports were likely to languish for 
some time. Moreover, Mr. Qu noted, domestic demand failed to show a 
meaningful improvement in August.

Analysts said the Chinese economy appeared to have largely shrugged off 
the mounting doses of economic medicine injected by the authorities.

Banks have been instructed to lend more since last year; infrastructure 
projects have been stepped up markedly; and the central bank lowered 
interest rates in June and July. The central bank has also been 
injecting more money into the interbank market in an effort to stimulate 
lending.

Many economists have been puzzled that the authorities have not stepped 
up their stimulus efforts more aggressively in recent weeks, as the 
extent of the slowdown has become more apparent.

Many expect the central bank soon to announce another cut in the 
so-called reserve requirement ratio for banks — a step that would free 
up more money for them to lend — while some expect a cut in interest rates.

“A lack of swiftness in policy response to China’s fast deteriorating 
employment situation could cost the economy heavily, in the way of 
consumer consumption and social stability,” Mr. Qu of HSBC said.

Some analysts, however, are now beginning to believe that Beijing may 
hold off on any such steps for the time being; they caution that China 
may not start to reaccelerate until late 2012 or even early 2013.

“The central bank seems to be very concerned about excess capacity and 
the potential for reigniting a rise in property prices — that is 
something they really want to avoid,” said Mr. Maguire of Asia Sentry 
Advisory. “The path of least regret at this stage could well be for them 
to do nothing and wait for the structural reforms to the economy to 
filter through, but that is a process that has to be measured in years 
rather than months.”


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