New  Asia
China Hits A  Great Wall
Gordon G. Chang, 09.09.10, 6:00 PM ET  
China, the land of "a million truths" and the fastest-changing society on  
earth, defies prediction. But I will boldly go where no prognosticator dares 
to  tread. Here are three definitive statements about China in the next 
decade. 
The first: This period will be known as "China's century." _China has just 
passed_ 
(http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2010/08/16/gordon-chang-china-economy-japan-united-states-gross-domestic-product/)
  Japan to  become the 
planet's second-largest economy, and the Chinese have big boy U.S. in  their 
gun 
sights.  
But China's century will be short, a few years at most, the quickest 
hundred  years in world history. By the end of 2011 Chinese growth rates will 
fall 
from  double-digit territory. Gross domestic product will begin a 
decade-long slide.  
How can this be? After all, China now has the world's fastest-growing 
economy  after Singapore. But super-fast growth is just a mirage. China should 
be 
 following the example of the United States, which is adjusting to a world 
with  fewer coal mines, trinket factories and handbag retailers.  
Instead, the State Council, Beijing's cabinet, decided in November 2008 to  
use government spending to avoid the pain of adjustment. So, after pouring a
  cool $1.1 trillion of stimulus into its economy last year, _growth 
reached_ (http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90778/90862/7067092.html)  a 
scorching 11.1% in  the first half of this one. Unfortunately, China has too 
much of most things.  Residential apartments? Would you believe 80 million 
vacant ones? That might be  an underestimate. The vacancy rate in new buildings 
is well over 50%. In Beijing  _it looks like it is over 65%_ 
(http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndy/2010-08/17/content_11161685.htm) .  
There are only two possible scenarios. There will be a property market  
crash--this is what would happen in almost any other country--or the central  
government will artificially support the market. Chinese leaders will likely  
choose the second path, forcing them to take steps that will lead to years 
of  negligible growth. Think Japan post-bubble. China will out-stagnate the  
Japanese. By 2013 Japan will overtake China and become, once again, the 
world's  second-largest economy. 
Second, by 2015 there will be an environmental disaster producing 2 million 
 refugees. Every season seems to produce a catastrophe of some sort. This 
year,  China experienced the worst drought since the Ming dynasty. Some 
Chinese, taking  their cue from starving North Koreans, scavenged wild plants 
as 
crops withered  in the fields. Then came the rains, _forcing some 250,000 to 
flee_ (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100823/ap_on_re_as/as_china_floods)  
their  homes during just one of the many storms.  
Two million homeless from a single event? That's not such a wild 
prediction.  The World Bank thinks there might be as many as 30 million 
environmental  
refugees in China by 2020, not from a one-off catastrophe but from the 
general  lack of water.  
Third, China will reach its population peak by 2020. Demographers now think 
 that will happen sometime between 2025 and 2030. Yet they have 
consistently  underestimated the deceleration of population growth. Beijing's 
statisticians,  to their credit, have begun to admit how much they have been 
wrong.   
____________________________________
  
China will continue to slow down. The abnormal sex ratio at  
birth--officially, there are over 119 males for every 100 females--will get  
worse. There 
will, in short, not be enough females. And, frankly, Chinese women  in large 
cities, like their counterparts throughout East Asia, are rejecting  
centuries-old social norms and deferring childbirth or skipping it altogether.  
Decades of Beijing's audacious population policies--first encouraging  
uncontrolled growth and then clamping down hard--will take their toll. 
So ditch the assumptions you currently hold about China. One decade from 
now,  the nation will be unrecognizable. 
Gordon G. Chang is the author of The Coming Collapse of  China.

-- 
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