from SLATE:
>> The General Glut In China

By Matthew Yglesias

Posted Thursday, Aug. 23, 2012, at 9:39 PM ET

Keith Bradsher reports that China has too much stuff:

>    Interviews with business owners and managers across a wide range of 
> Chinese industries presented a picture of mounting stockpiles of unsold goods.

 >   Business owners who manufacture or distribute products as varied
as dehumidifiers, plastic tubing for ventilation systems, solar
panels, bedsheets and steel beams for false ceilings said that sales
had fallen over the last year and showed little sign of recovering.

>    “Sales are down 50 percent from last year, and inventory is piled high,” 
> said To Liangjian, the owner of a wholesale company distributing picture 
> frames and cups, as he paused while playing online poker in his deserted 
> storefront here in southeastern China.<

Given that the amount of stuff per capita in China is substantially
lower than the amount of stuff per capita in Mexico (to say nothing of
France or the United States) this seems to me like a strange problem
to have. But if the PRC leadership was paying during their
Marxism-Leninism classes they'll recall that Marx thought capitalism
would inevitably lead to crises of overproduction that could not be
dealt with by active demand management strategies. I don't know much
about China or the market for steel beams for false ceilings, but my
general view is that Marx was wrong and a "glut" of this sort is a
sign of bad aggregate demand policies.

It would, however, be quite ironic if Marx turned out to be right and
China's success in becoming a manufacturing powerhouse led to a
socialist revolution.<<
-- 
Jim Devine / If you're going to support the lesser of two evils, you
should at least know the nature of that evil.
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