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Can Chinese growth be sustained?

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How to Sustain the Chinese Economic Miracle? - Jorg Bibow. Working Paper No. 617 | September 2010 This paper investigates China’s role in creating global imbalances, and the related call for a massive renminbi revaluation as a (supposed) panacea to forestall their reemergence as the world economy recovers from severe crisis.

How to Sustain the Chinese Economic Miracle? - Jorg Bibow

We reject the prominence widely attributed to China as a cause of global imbalances and the exclusive focus on the renminbi-dollar exchange rate as misguided. And we emphasize that China's response to the global crisis has been exemplary. Apart from acting as a growth leader in the global recovery by boosting domestic demand to offset the slump in exports, China has in the process successfully completed the first stage in rebalancing its economy, which is in stark contrast to other leading trading nations that have simply resumed previous policy patterns.

Tracking the Consensus

Nomura_March2013_China_financial_Risks. The Bronze Swan Arrives: Is The End Of Copper Financing China's "Lehman Event"? In all the hoopla over Japan's stock market crash and China's PMI miss last night, the biggest news of the day was largely ignored: copper, and the fact that copper's ubiquitous arbitrage and rehypothecation role in China's economy through the use of Chinese Copper Financing Deals (CCFD) is coming to an end. Copper, as China pundits may know, is the key shadow interest rate arbitrage tool, through the use of financing deals that use commodities with high value-to-density ratios such as gold, copper, nickel, which in turn are used as collateral against which USD-denominated China-domestic Letters of Credit are pleged, in what can often result in a seemingly infinite rehypothecation loop (see explanation below) between related onshore and offshore entities, allowing loop participants to pick up virtually risk-free arbitrage (i.e., profits), which however boosts China's FX lending and leads to upward pressure on the CNY.

From Goldman: So just what is the significance of CCFDs? ...

Taking a position...

The Chinese economy in 2013 - signals & noise. Fault Lines. The question of capital flight. Academic papers. Inconvenient truths about fixing China. China: hard or soft landing? The case for a soft landing. The case for a hard landing.