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Stealth
Withdrawal of Wealth From China By Its Entrepreneurs Unwittingly
Helped China Avert Runaway Inflation. But That Practice Is About
To Be Halted.
by
Bill Sardi
Recently
by Bill Sardi: What
if the News Media Reports Missiles Launched From the Iranian Coast
Hit a US Aircraft Carrier With Deaths and Casualties?
Predictions
that economic bubbles would pop in an ever-growing Chinese economy
have been frequent
over the past 10 years. But prognosticators failed to realize
that Chinese bankers are more conservative than the colleagues in
the US and require 30-60% down payment on home loans. Furthermore,
as China captured trillions of dollars in US money, it set much
of it aside to guard against run-away inflation and to pour into
the economy as the meltdown in the US economy beginning in 2008
resulted in a decline in exports from China to the US.
Certainly China
over-responded to this crisis and went so far as to build whole
cities that remain unoccupied. However, incomes there are simply
not sufficient for people to move into these modernized communities.
China is cunning.
It holds over $1 trillion in US treasury bills that may never be
repaid in full value. It has begun to seek tangible wealth rather
than hold US T-bills and has conducted a worldwide search to buy
minerals, oil, unprecedented
amounts of gold in the form of US bullion coins, or to obtain
long-term contracts for the same, and to barter
without using the US dollar as the medium of exchange. Marc
Faber, financial commentator based in Asia, says China puts
its money into building infrastructure whereas the US puts its newly
printed money into consumption. American consumption also boosts
China’s exports.
What all the
analysts missed, while they predicted the huge expansion of credit
in China to result in uncontrolled inflation, was that much of China’s
money was covertly leaving the country, serving as a counterbalance
in its economy.
Gordon Chang,
a writer and commentator on Chinese affairs, wrote a largely overlooked
article (just 3 posted comments on it) that was published online
at Forbes.com in June of 2011. Chang’s report, entitled "Chinese
Entrepreneurs Are Leaving China," said wealthy Chinese
are leaving the country in droves and taking their money with them.
How much money? (Are you sitting down?) An estimated $2.18 trillion
exited China in hidden cash transfers between 2000 and 2008. Whoa!
We know the
Greeks
are funneling their money into overseas banks, but that amounts
to a vacuum of just $16 billion. But what is going on in China is
a game changer for the whole world, especially if covert methods
to move Chinese money offshore is put to a halt, as it is predicted
will occur sometime soon with a leadership change and accompanying
financial reforms in China.
The US has
benefited immensely from the entry of Chinese money into its economy.
According to Chang, in the last five years there has been a 73%
increase in Chinese investment to the United States. Chinese
people are seen on bus tours in California, visiting real estate
properties and paying the full purchase price in cash money. But
just exactly how do the Chinese funnel their money out of the country?
A US real estate
executive gives us a hint at the answer to this question when he
said in a 2009 interview published in China Daily that he
didn’t think most Chinese individuals would qualify to purchase
property in the US "unless
the money is already here."
The Chinese
have had centuries of practice to side-step government confiscation
of their money. One method is to export goods from China to the
US in a shipping container where, in this example, the bill of lading
cites 1000 cases of widgets being shipped. But there are actually
1400 cases of widgets inside the container. The profits from the
sale of 1000 cases of widgets is returned to China, but the extra
400 cases are sold and Chinese goods are converted into US money
where a Chinese counterparty here in the US houses it, sometimes
in Chinese banks located here in the US. This is how Chinese home
buyers get their cash to buy properties at full price. Chinese families
send their children to be schooled in America, and the money for
their education is already in the US. None of it has been taxed
by China or the US.
Chang quotes
economic analyst Zhong Dajun to say: "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."
"The loss may be even higher than all the foreign investment
we have attracted."
Xi Jinping
is expected to become the next Party general secretary at the end
of 2012 and it is rumored that the hemorrhage of money from China
will be put to a halt with economic reforms. That will be a game-changing
event.
China averted
a flood of money hitting their economy and causing run-away inflation
in part because Chinese entrepreneurs were siphoning money away
overseas. Will a closure of this exit door then result in predicted
inflation? My bet is the Chinese will be smart enough to dampen
this threat.
China has a
bigger default to face – that of the US’ inability to pay back over
$1 trillion China loaned to America in purchasing US Treasury bills.
The Chinese know, if inflation drives up the cost of food that it
must avert unrest in the streets. China could be forced to accept
pennies on the dollar for these T-bills and receive its deflated
money in the form of containers of grain and other foodstuffs from
the US, who already
supplies China with record sales of foodstuffs now.
China knows
it is holding a diminishing asset in US T-bills. So does the rest
of the world. The US economy keeps getting propped by its lenders.
A US default on its debt would result in an implosion of the world’s
economies. At some point the US will not be able to pay interest
on its debt and be forced to default and the dollar will collapse.
That day may come sooner than predicted. John Williams of ShadowStats.com
says the outside date for that event is 2014 (ShadowStats report
#414). Then what?
February
15, 2012
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
His
latest book is Downsizing
Your Body.
Copyright
© 2012 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should link rather than
post at other URLs.
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