The cover of this issue features "Special Issue: The year Ahead 2016."
(1) Dexter Roberts, China’s Consumers Need to Step Up
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/ar ... ers-need-to-step-up
Quote:
"Those two goals—fostering a consumer economy and giving GDP a short-term boost—are contradictory. Developing a consumption-driven economy means accepting growth below the 7-plus-percent annual rise of recent years, which was achieved in part by state-run banks and local government finance companies giving enterprises cheap credit to build often unneeded factories and real estate developments. [BusinessWeek does not explain further on this point]
"In the first quarter of 2015, for the first time, service industries—including jobs from lawyers to tourist guides—made up a bit more than half of GDP. The service economy grew 8.4 percent in the first nine months; manufacturing, only 6 percent.
"Service companies employ more people than manufacturers to generate the same amount of GDP. Not only are service workers more numerous, they’re also often better paid than factory hands.
"While [China's] policymakers have spent billions of dollars improving health care, expanding a pension program, building schools, and hiring teachers, consumers have pushed the savings rate up about 7 percentage points in the past decade, says Andrew Batson, China research director at Beijing-based consulting firm Gavekal Dragonomics.
China's to-do list should include: "opening state-dominated service industries such as insurance and banking to private and foreign investors. So far, signs are discouraging: The planned reform of state-owned enterprises aims to build up national champions by merging companies, not privatizing or shrinking them.
Note: summary underneath the title in print: The leadership is trying to refocus while resorting to old-fashioned stimulus.
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