Forbes
 
 
Chinese Entrepreneurs Are Leaving China
Jun. 5 2011

 
 
China’s rich, primarily driven by a sense of insecurity, are taking money 
out  of their country.  Many are actually preparing to move elsewhere. 
According to a new study, almost 60% of China’s  “high net worth 
individuals,” defined as those possessing more than 10 million  yuan in 
investable 
assets, are either considering emigration through investment  programs or are 
completing the emigration process.  The_ survey_ 
(http://www.bain.com/bainweb/about/press_release_detail.asp?id=28405&menu_url=for_the_media.asp)
 , 
conducted by China Merchants Bank and Bain  & Co., also reports that 27% of 
those with more than 100 million yuan in  investable assets have already 
emigrated and 47% of them are thinking about  leaving the Motherland. 
The stunning results correspond to reports that the U.S. Treasury unit  
monitoring illegal money flows has, since the beginning of last summer, 
detected  a surge in hidden cash transfers out of China. 
Almost all of the funds supporting emigration  applications were spirited 
out of China in violation of Beijing’s strict  rules.  The country leads the 
world in illicit fund transfers, _according to_ 
(http://www.gfip.org/storage/gfip/documents/reports/IFF2010/gfi_iff_update_report-web.pdf)
  Global 
Financial Integrity, a  nonprofit.  The estimated total of China’s outbound 
flows 
from 2000 to 2008  was a staggering $2.18 trillion. 
The flood of “hot money” leaving China picked up in the last quarter of  
2008.  That was when the Chinese central government announced its stimulus  
plan, which initiated a new phase in the partial renationalization of the  
economy.  Then, Premier Wen Jiabao started pouring state cash into the  state 
sector and state financial institutions began diverting credit to  
state-sponsored infrastructure.  As a result of the stimulus program, about  
95% of 
China’s growth in 2009 was attributable to investment, and almost all of  the 
investment had come from the state.  The percentage for 2010 will not  be 
too far off of that. 
Beijing’s plan, however, was good for private entrepreneurs who, although  
shut out of many portions of the economy by state enterprises, rode the  
resulting asset bubbles to even greater wealth.  The number of the  country’s 
high net worth individuals according to the China Merchants-Bain study  will 
reach 585,000 this year, almost double the figure for 2008. 
The emigration of China’s wealthy has, not surprisingly, triggered  
controversy.  “We have been working hard to develop the economy in the past  30 
years, but now these elite members of society are fleeing with the majority  of 
the wealth,” _said_ 
(http://china.globaltimes.cn/society/2011-04/647415.html)  economic analyst 
Zhong Dajun to the Global  Times, the Communist 
Party-run newspaper.  “The loss may be even  higher than all the foreign 
investment 
we have attracted.  It is as if,  when the time of harvest comes, we find 
the fruits have all gone to others’  baskets.”  Zhong should not be shocked. 
 Beijing, since 2008, has been  targeting private entrepreneurs and abusing 
them even more than usual, so it is  natural they are now trying to protect 
themselves from a rapacious state. 
And the situation is bound to get even worse if Xi Jinping becomes the next 
 Party general secretary at the end of next year, as just about everyone  
expects.  Xi will undoubtedly bring his fellow “princelings” into positions  
of political power. 
The princelings, descendents of former leaders of the People’s Republic, 
will  surely use their new political clout to consolidate their grip on the  
economy.  This means, among other things, that others, especially owners of  
private domestic enterprises, will have even fewer opportunities than they 
do  today. 
“We can only hope the rich people stay out of patriotism,” says Xia 
Xueluan  of Peking University.  Patriotism, these days, may be the only thing  
keeping Chinese entrepreneurs in China. 
And, from the look of things, it is not enough.  The country’s wealthy  are 
going on shopping tours for U.S. real estate and, if they have not done so  
already, are moving their families abroad.  There has, in the last five  
years, been a 73% increase in Chinese investment immigrants to the United  
States.  Countries, like Canada, are raising their minimum investment  
requirements for investment-immigrant candidates due to the sheer size of the  
tide 
of Chinese cash. 
Chinese cash is largely responsible for the third wave of buying from Asia  
into Vancouver.  In an “unprecedented” surge of business for brokerages in 
 that city in February, Chinese buyers snapped up homes, townhouses, and  
condominiums as sales skyrocketed 70% over the preceding month. 
As foreigners pour into China, China’s entrepreneurs are taking their money 
 out.  Which group do you think knows more about what is going  on?

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