Gold Forecaster
- Global Watch
Unstoppable Chinese growth
& Gold
Julian D.W.
Phillips
Oct 23, 2006
There's a great deal of talk
about slowing economic growth in China. We heard this talk last
year too. Indeed the incredible growth in China has gone on so
far for 15 years, so shouldn't it slow? So far no! We have not
seen a slowing down, 'soft landing' or anything but a firm hand
on the tiller of growth by the Chinese Central government keeping
momentum up around 10% and seeking to rein in only excesses.
They are reasonably concerned that the growth should be maintainable
in the long-term. Excesses serve no one, least of all China.
Guiding growth
It
is in this light that we must see the new controls being imposed
in China. "China must maintain controls over medium and
long-term lending and investment," Chinese Premier Wen said.
He also vowed to tighten rules on land sales, cut pollution,
improve public finances and cap surging real estate in all major
Chinese cities. Strong controls over such a burgeoning economy
are vital as the present numbers show that Gross Domestic Product
in the third quarter increased 10.4% from a year earlier, after
expanding 11.3% in the previous three months. Second-quarter
growth was the fastest in the last decade. To stem the excesses,
China restricted bank lending and project approvals to bring
about a gradual slowdown in investments [over-capacity
is a present problem, requiring a catch-up in other sectors]
in an economy that currently accounts for about a tenth of global
growth. The government is encouraging China's 1.3 billion people
to increase spending to sustain demand and underpin employment
as the government attempts to rebalance the economy. Since April,
the government has imposed curbs on land use and new project
approvals, shuttered investments that flout government guidelines
and ordered banks to slow lending. The central bank raised interest
rates twice, forced banks to set aside more money as reserves
and stepped up measures to drain funds from the financial system
through bond sales. Money supply grew 16.8% in September, the
slowest pace in more than a year. The rate on seven-day loans
between banks has slipped to 2.6% from 2.89% on August 10th,
reflecting the increase is funds available. China will continue
raising interest rates!
The Benefits for
Chinese society
Ideally the main
driver of the Chinese economy [exports] should continue to feed
the furnace of Chinese growth, but be joined by internal demand
as the level of wages in China rises to create a larger and larger
middle class and richer working class that promotes Chinese consumer
demand and adds to the growth furnace of the nation. The government
has limited Yuan gains to 2.6% since easing a peg to the $ in
July 2005. One of its biggest concerns is the potential loss
of export jobs resulting from a higher currency, which could
lead to unrest among laid-off urban employees and China's millions
of migrant workers. While curbing investment, the government
has cut taxes, raised minimum wages and civil servants' salaries
to encourage spending. The national savings rate is about double
the world average. Retail sales in September rose 13.9% from
a year earlier, the most since January, today's report said.
[Wal-Mart Stores Inc. plans to spend about $1 billion to double
its stores in China by acquiring Trust-Mart.]
Commodity prices
lower?
Some economists have said that the encouragement
of internal demand will be at the expense of export growth, itself
causing a slowdown in the demand for commodities and metals and
whilst we respect these opinions, they do not make sense when
one looks at the objective of the Central government's objectives.
These opinions are expressed as a reason why the commodities
boom should slow as well. Again we have difficulty with this.
When a nation of 1.3 billion people reach out for development
we have to track the extent of the development as it reaches
more and more of the nation. We hear numbers like 400 million
poor people just waiting to enter the cities for work. That is
33% more than the entire population of the U.S. China is only
now passing the U.K. to become the world's fourth-largest economy.
So the development has a huge distance to go before the all-powerful
Chinese Central government reaches its targets. In line with
these aims has to be the building of consumer demand internally
so the dependence on exports drops down considerably. But
this does not mean that exports will suffer, but that internal
demand has to mushroom.
First - The reference to the negative impact
on commodities has to exclude gold and silver. We have to emphasize
that gold demand is largely separate from other metals and
is a metal to be acquired as wealth, arising from the growth
of the Chinese nation. Any 'slowdown' [if it does come] is
most unlikely to affect the demand for gold, which is rising
steadily at around 20% per annum [which is very slow in our opinion
as the demand comes from a narrow sector of the Chinese population,
close to government and not the Chinese nation per se].
Second - The criteria by which we assess the Western
economies of the world have to be modified to gain an accurate
assessment of the Chinese economy. It is unlike any other. A
parallel with Germany before the last World War is pertinent
at this point. After the Depression in the early thirties, the
U.S. innovatively used stimulation to set its economy
on a growth path. It was aware of the potential for war but did
not adjust their economy for it until it burst on them. At the
same time, and suffering a depression, Hitler was credited with
stimulating the German economy by building a war machine, which
then had to be used. So Hitler forced the economy to go as it
did, a demonstration of just how a fully dominant government
can control the economy.
The Chinese government wants
to develop China to the point where it is a self-sufficient economy,
self-driving as well as a supplier to the rest of the world.
If it carries on at the present rate it will dominate the global
economy and be one of its leading drivers, if not the main one,
eventually. Yes, that is one or two decades time, but that is
what the government of China wants and it will harness everything
in its reach to achieve that goal. The Chinese government has
an iron grip on its economy and will not be dictated to by Western
economic principles, but will dominate economic growth. So, China's
economy is not the result of the different facets of the economy
evolving as economics dictates, but is the result of a central
government policy, which harnesses economic forces to achieve
its goals.
What we see on the intransigent
exchange rate policy typifies this point.
Our conclusion is that growth
in China will continue at the fast pace we have seen for the
past few years, but is now about to focus on internal growth
so the Chinese people can feel the benefits of their increase
in wealth. Consequently, the osmotic drift of wealth to the
East will continue to feed the Chinese Trade surpluses and reach
even further as it develops the skills to emulate Japanese
penetration of the global economy of the last 50 years.
And the Impact
on the Gold Price?
How will this affect
the gold price? In terms of rising Chinese demand? - Very slowly
until the gold distribution system in China develops to
the point where small town gold prices are the same as those
in Shanghai.
In
terms of the evolution of the global economy, the impact of
Chinese development will be dramatic as the flow of Capital
to the East threatens the Balance of Power in the global monetary
system. The $30-million-an-hour pace of growth in China's
foreign exchange reserves took them to $988 billion at the end
of last month. The trade surplus reached $110 billion through
September, already exceeding last year's total, and economists
forecast the gap will widen to more than $150 billion this year.
As the sheer weight of capital flows into the ownership of the
Chinese [either in U.S. Treasuries or other currencies] so its
control over those currency [and Treasury] markets grows.
More importantly the longer
they keep the $ strong in this way, the easier it will
be for them to tap more developed nation's wealth through a continuing
and even rising flow of capital to China. Any diversification
from the U.S.$ or the imposition of the Yuan as a global reserve
currency, by China will weaken the $. However, until they have
a firm grip on the global economy through Trade and Capital investments,
they are unlikely to use such power as it will reduce the spending
power of their surpluses.
In the meantime the potential
threat from this source will encourage more and more investment
in gold.
Oct 23, 2006
-Julian
D.W. Phillips
email: gold-authenticmoney@iafrica.com
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