Observers have been quick to blame China’s economic slowdown for the panic in 
global stock markets this past week, but Seamus Milne of the Guardian correctly 
notes that China is a “transmission belt rather than a motor” of the global 
crisis of capitalism which began with the 2007-08 financial crisis in the US. 

"A dysfunctional model of capitalism, built on deregulation, privatisation and 
low wages, crashed and burned seven years ago. But the fallout from that crisis 
is still ricocheting around the world, from Europe to the ‘emerging economies’, 
as the attempt to refloat a broken model with cheap credit inflates asset 
bubbles and share buybacks – or enforce it with austerity – fuels new crises”.  

The remnants of state planning and ownership introduced by the Chinese 
revolution have given it a greater capacity to cope with economic crisis, but 
what Milne describes as its “hybrid” model of a capitalist mixed economy hasn’t 
been enough to shield it from asset bubbles at home and stagnant growth in its 
major export markets in the US, Europe, and Japan. “China’s room for manoeuvre 
would certainly be much narrower if it had gone for the full deregulation and 
privatisation package” urged on it by these more mature capitalist economies 
and the international financial system under their control, Milne writes.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/aug/26/china-crisis-market-mayhem-aftershocks-2008-another-crash?CMP=ema_1364
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