All those people who still believe Australia won’t dip into recession in 2009, as the IMF, OECD, Federal Treasury and Reserve Bank, should think again.
China, whose ‘solid’ demand for our resources was supposed to help keep us out of recession in 2009, is getting worried.
So worried that it slashed interest rates Wednesday night by the biggest margin in 11 years, once again it proving that it pays to watch what central banks do, not what they say.
Bloomberg reported yesterday that a senior Chinese economic official had warned that “Some economic indicators in China showed a â??faster declineâ? in November, the nationâ??s top economic planner said, underlining the urgency of government measures to support growth and employment.”
â??Some economic indicators weakened further in November, showing a faster decline,â? Zhang Ping, chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, told a briefing in Beijing.
â??Employment is being impacted by factory closures and many migrant workers are returning to their home towns.â?
China’s State Information Centre lowered its growth forecast to 8% for this quarter from 9% last quarter, a significant decline from the double digit growth of 2007′s 11.9%.
“The global financial crisis has not bottomed out yet,” Zhang Ping said.
Just as the bank of England dropped rates by 1.5% at the start of this month, and our central bank has cut rates by 2% in almost three months, with a 1% surprise slash in October, China’s central bank got out the axe and rolled four of its normal 0.27% trims into one big hack of 1.08%.
China’s economy is slowing, slowing much faster than thought. The World Bank this week picked up on it and was mostly ignored by the media.
The World Bank reckons China’s economy will grow at 7.5% next year, the lowest rate in around 19 years, the IMF says 8.5%, the OECD, 8%.
The cut by the People’s Bank of China of 1.08% shows the central government is far more concerned about the level of slowing growth in the economy, than even the most pessimistic commentator.
It was the 4th rate cut in just over three months: rates have now been cut a total of 1.89% in an easing almost unprecedented in China in recent years.
The key one year lending rate falls to 5.58% and the deposit rate will fall by the same amount to 2.52% percent. The changes are effective from yesterday.
The latest cut is designed to support the 4 trillion Yuan ($US586 billion) spending plan announced two weeks ago, just after the previous rate cut.
The central bank also cut the reserve requirement for the biggest banks to 16% from 17%, effective a week from today.
That’s an equally significant change: the central bank had been tightening that requirement for over two years now, interspersed with the odd rate rise.
There are reports China’s banking regulators also want banks to boost their capital levels by year’s end:
Doing that and lending more to business don’t sit easily: something will have to give. The plunge in the property sector is said to be behind the directive to banks to put aside more capital.
The reserve asset requirement for smaller banks will fall to 14% from 16%, but again they are exposed to property loans in smaller towns and cities. .
The central bank said in a statement the rate and reserve cuts were aimed “at ensuring sufficient liquidity in the banking system, and to promote steady loan growth so that monetary policy can play an active role in supporting economic growth.
While China’s economy grew 9% in the third quarter, it was the slowest pace in five years and marked the fourth quarter in a row that growth had eased. Just over 15 months ago growth was more than 12%; it averaged 11.9% in 2007.
Exports remained OK in October, as did retail sales and domestic investment, but a slowdown in orders, rising company failures, and more importantly, a plunging real estate market, are eroding the drive in the economy.
More worrying was the sharp fall in industrial production in October to a seven year low. Thousands of people are being laid off as factories close. Riots and protests are being reported from industrial cities on the coast and in the south, a pointer to the Government’s campaign to tell everyone how bad things are becoming.
Property prices and sales are falling in major cities and construction contracted in September by the most since the 1990s, according to some commentators, a point acknowledged by the World Bank in its latest forecasts
“Weakness in the real estate market, partly reflecting an earlier tightening in macroeconomic policies, is now feeding through to several â??upstreamâ? industries such as cement and steel.
â??Looking ahead, private sector investment is likely to be weighed down by the unfavorable external prospects and continued weakness in real estate,” the World Bank said.
“Private consumption growth is likely to soften in 2009, but will receive some support from fiscal policy.”
———–
Meanwhile the situation in Japan seems to worsening with political instability starting to interfere with economic policy, which if it continues could see the economy of our biggest trading partner slide further into recession.
The Japanese government this week said it was putting off legislation required to finance a promised stimulus package until next year, just as the country’s central bank lowered its assessment of the economy.
Prime Minister Taro Aso said the supplementary budget needed to pay for a stimulus package unveiled in October would only be put to a parliamentary session starting in January, rather than to the current session.
He and his Liberal Democratic Party are presently locked (as were his two predecessors) in a battle of wills with the Opposition parties in Japan, a situation that has brought parliamentary activity to a standstill.
The prime minister indicated that there were administrative difficulties in presenting the bills to the current session of the Japanâ??s parliament, but the opposition accused the government of failing to make economic recovery its top priority.
Spending of more than $US100 billion is apparently caught up in the impasse.
The delay was announced as the Bank of Japan said economic activity was likely to slow further and funding conditions had deteriorated.
â??The increased sluggishness in Japanâ??s economic activity will likely persist over the next several quarters as the slowdown in overseas economies becomes more evident,â? the bank said in its monthly report (See below).
The Japanese economy is now in recession: figures published last week showed the worldâ??s second largest economy had fallen into recession for the first time in seven years, exports have slumped, a trade deficit has emerged, thanks in part to still solid imports.
And the stronger yet has hit exporters, especially the car giants like Toyota and Honda.
Mr Asoâ??s decision to delay supplementary budget legislation has fuelled concerns that the governmentâ??s economic stimulus measures are unlikely to prevent Japan from falling into a deeper recession.
The country runs the biggest risk among the industrialised nations of falling into deflation next year, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the think-tank, said on Tuesday.
—————–
Here’s what the Bank of Japan said in its monthly update this week. It’s an English translation from Japanese, it’s less than optimistic.
Japan’s economic activity has been increasingly sluggish due to the effects of earlier increases in energy and materials prices and the decrease in exports.
Exports have decreased. Business fixed investment has also declined, mainly due to the deterioration in corporate profits.
Private consumption has been relatively weak, mainly due to sluggish growth in household income and the increase in prices of energy and food.
Housing investment has been more or less flat. Public investment, meanwhile, has been sluggish. Reflecting these developments in demand both at home and abroad, production has continued to decrease.
The increased sluggishness in Japan’s economic activity will likely persist over the next several quarters as the slowdown in overseas economies becomes more evident.
Exports are expected to continue decreasing due to the slowdown in overseas economies and the appreciation of the yen.
Domestic private demand is likely to remain relatively weak, due to the decrease in corporate profits and real household income. Public investment, meanwhile, is projected to be on a downtrend.
With these developments in demand, it is likely that production will continue decreasing and the pace of decrease will be faster in the immediate future.
On the price front, the three-month rate of change in domestic corporate goods prices has become negative, mainly due to the setback in international commodity prices.
The year-on-year rate of increase in consumer prices (excluding fresh food) is currently around 2.5 percent against the background of the increase in prices of energy and food.
Looking at price developments for the time being, domestic corporate goods prices are likely to continue decreasing, mainly due to the setback in international commodity prices.
The year-on-year rate of increase in consumer prices is expected to moderate reflecting the declines in the prices of petroleum products and stabilization in the prices of food.
In the midst of the ongoing turmoil in global financial markets, the yen appreciated rapidly and stock prices plunged toward the end of last month.
Since then, the yen has depreciated and stock prices have recovered slightly, but they have continued to be volatile. In money markets, since the Bank of Japan changed the guideline for money market operations, the weighted average of the overnight call rate has remained at around 0.3 percent.
However, interbank rates on term instruments and JGB repo market rates have remained high, indicating increased risk aversion among market participants.
Meanwhile, yields on long-term government bonds have been around the same level as last month.
Financial conditions in Japan have become less accommodative on the whole, as the financial positions of small firms have deteriorated and an increasing number of large firms have faced a worsening in funding conditions in the markets.
The overnight call rate has been at a low level relative to the state of economic activity and price developments.
However, funding conditions in the markets have deteriorated, as suggested by the fact that credit spreads on CP and corporate bonds have widened and an increasing number of firms have postponed issuing them. As a result, the amount outstanding of CP and corporate bonds issued has fallen below the previous year’s level.
Large firms have increased their borrowing from banks to cover the decline in the issuance of CP and corporate bonds, although credit demand for working capital has stopped increasing due to the drop in materials prices.
As for small firms, an increasing number of these firms have reported that their financial positions are weak and lending attitudes of financial institutions are severe.
Not a glimmer of light anywhere.
IMPORTANT: AIR reports about financial markets and investment products in the widest sense possible. The AIR website and all its contents is prepared for general information only, and as such, the specific needs, investment objectives or financial situation of any particular user have not been taken into consideration. Individuals should therefore talk with their financial planner or advisor before making any investment decisions.
Australasian Investment Review
Tags: Pointer
English may become extinct in the near future?
China, Japan and India’s economies have been rapidly growing in the last few years & it is likely that one of them will become the world’s superpower. Whereas, USA is going through a slump right now & European economy is going from bad to worse. If this trend continues any further, we might as well be facing the prospect of China or Japan dominating the world & the English speaking nations in the world will have to give way to the Chinese.
Schools will no longer offer English as a key, important language anymore. Stock markets, News broadcasts, movie posters etc. will all contain Chinese characters, as opposed to English that we have been accustomed to. Soon, English will become like what, say French or German is at the moment. English will lose it’s importance.
Are you scared that this thing is waiting to happen? Chinese will dominate English
arabic rules
References :
Not worried at all. There are enough native English speakers that the language will continue to flourish for a long, long time.
References :
I’m not really scared of that. I don’t think it’s a realistic scenario. Then again, if what I see in Yahoo! Answers is any indication, English is in grave danger from the people who supposedly speak it.
References :
the english speaking people didn’t seem to care about taking away the language of the african or aborigini peoples of the americas…so what goes around may come around….such is life!!! if we wound up speaking another language does that make us any less human???? english was not the first language of the world..life is always evolving and so does languages!!!
References :
Not going to happen – I went to college with a girl from Japan, who told me that her grade school REQUIRED English to be spoken at all times while on school grounds. Asa result, she was taking Japanese in college to learn how to write the characters, because she was 18 and had never learned how to write them when in Japan. Her spoken Japanese was fine, but she did not know the written language. Her English was excellent, both verbal and written. In Germany, they start learning English in the 5th grade. Their English is excellent. In Portugal, they are required to take English in high school. Chinese is spoken by more people than English is, due to the population of China, but English is the language of the international business world and is spoken more widely across the globe. It won’t go extinct anytime in the near future.
References :
You are absolutely wrong, here is why:
1. The US and EU economies are in very good shape (fluctuations are natural market behavior), and although the countries you mentioned are growing economically, they are no where near the US or EU, nor will they ever realistically reach those levels without large social and political change to stabilize the growth. Look at the Per Capita GDP (average income of a citizen) of the US and EU versus China or India; US=$41,800, EU=$28,100, China=$6,800, India=$3,300 (CIA World Factbook).
2. Japan’s economy has been slumping since the 1990′s, it’s poised to come back, but won’t experience growth near China or India because it’s already a developed country and there simply isn’t as much room for growth. (Japan Economy Overview)
3. English is one of India’s official languages, and it is the most predominantly used language in the country. India is the most populous English speaking country in the world (India People)
4. Most colleges in the world require English proficiency to graduate, as most professional literature in written in English. This is why almost all people in the world with a college education speak English. As a foreign Exchange student at a university in Mexico, I was amaze to learn that most textbooks used there (for college classes conducted in Spanish) were in English. Spanish language versions of the books didn’t exist.
5. Japanese isn’t really spoken outside of Japan, business between Japanese and foreign companies is conducted in English. English is a required class for students in Japan.
6. Mandarin is growing in strength as a language in China and much of Asia, but there simply aren’t Mandarin teachers throughout the world to teach the language and China isn’t enough of an economic force yet to make others speak their language, so they learn English. It is much easier for Chinese to learn English (like non-English speaking countries do) than for the World to learn Mandarin.
I have 3 college degrees (Accounting, International Business, and Spanish), Speak fluent Spanish and intermediate French. Studied and lived in Mexico for a year, and I currently work in the international business field.
References :
CIA World Factbook – https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/rankorder/2004rank.html
Japan Economy Overview –
https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ja.html#Econ
India People –
https://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/in.html#People
*shrug* Nope, not scared at all. Since when was the USA and English language the center of the universe? What I would love to see is a planet-wide "common tongue" or "trade tongue" that everyone speaks in addition to their native language. Maybe Latin could make a come-back!
References :
it wont… as long as the english are still in power with the world market
usa is still definitely strong in many aspects & european market is still standing very firm..
look at the european cars & brand names… still a fever
and the just reacently.. newspaper anounced sum european gang earns 60,000,000(dollar or euro.. cant remember)/day
so… the english still has a very strong role in the world
but for the rapidly improving china, there’s definiety a time in which i might overcome the english… but not in a short time
References :
It won’t happen. English is firmly entrenched in North America, Australia, and Britain
References :
In my opinion, the only real danger for English language comes from English-speaking people who don’t care to learn spelling&grammar and use too much slang. English is not my mother tongue, but from what I see here on Yahoo Answers, my English is better than theirs.
References :
Considering English is the standard language for Aviation, Technology and computer programming (all programming languages are based in English) I seriously doubt there’s a good reason to be concerned. Even though there are Asian countries that are booming in growth, their technological development is dependant on technologies designed with English-speaking platforms.
English also dominates as a "peace language" along with French. It is spoken at the U.N. and it is spoken at the Olympics, in addition to the ‘native languages’. English speakers have impacted a lot more areas of technology and development that Chinese has.
You see, French, Spanish, Russian even were not the basis for all technology and aviation….English was and in reality, I don’t see it being logical to rewrite an entire programming format to be character-based (like what Chinese is).
Chinese already dominates English, though. Over a Billion people speak Chinese as natives.
Remember, England is just an Island, but the Sun never set on the English Empire…..likewise with the impact. The sun will always set on the Chinese speaking world.
References :
I hope not
References :
It’s not impossible that Chinese will become a stronger language worldwide than English (I think it’s much less likely that Japanese will–far fewer speakers and a much more complicated writing system). The scenario you describe may come to pass in much of Eastern Asia. But that’s a far far cry from English becoming "extinct". THAT would take at least several hundred years.
India probably has more native or near-native English speakers than Canada and Australia combined.
References :
No one alive on the planet today will be witness to your bold assertions. The economic growth of all countries wax and wane as influenced by any number of domestic or international reasons from year to year. It cannot seriously be considered a factor in determining what the dominant language of the earth will be at any time in the furure. So the short answer is ‘No’ I am not afraid.
References :