I work hard to avoid RTing anything by this trash outlet and the good CCP propaganda soldiers of the Global Times but for numerous reasons in this case I will make an exception. First, I really should feel hurt that haven't called me names I can put on my Twitter profile. 1/n
Second, this article is really is really a beautiful article in a very twisted way. What I mean by that is the article is actually very serious in tone and language indicating they take the threat of what has been done very serious. As a reader, this signals that 2/n
You should take their words seriously rather than GT typical rhetoric. Next, their logic is very subtly perverse but acceptable to a casual reader. For instance, they say they collect only information that is public. (As a side note that is not true but leave that aside) 3/n
Think about what they are saying: ANY public data, information, can be China's. ANY. They actually write: "Information published on public platfrom may indicate given implied consent." (Spelling error theirs). That is an expansive and perverse data standard in reality 4/n
Next, they say that nothing done is illegal. Illegal how where? They tell you: "as per the civil and data law in China, unless individuals give clear objection or when the disclosure substantially harm their interets...". Spelling error theirs again. Think about 5/n
what is being said here. Two important things. 1. Only applicable law that matters globally in data is Chinese law. I'm sure European citizens and GDPR will be shocked to learn this. 2. If you (wherever you are in the world) have a problem you have to know Zhenhua was doing 6/n
This and take up a legal challenge in China. How do you think that would go? There are multiple other issues with the article. However, in reality this is a master class in persuasive propaganda because it sounds very reasonable with a serious tone but is actually quite perverse

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More from @BaldingsWorld

Apr 3
Ever so often I find things written about China that are the kind of things, I almost wish I had written it myself they are just so good. This is one of those pieces. Allow me a moment to highlight what I think are some of the key pieces a couple of key extrapolations. 1/n
This piece is about local government financing vehicles (LGFVs) and how they came to be in China and their importance for both growth and their outsized importance to debt composition in China. As the author notes, the overall financial picture is bad. Really bad. 2/n
For the uninitiated, LGFVs are basically qusi-public entities that are not technically owned by the local government but for multiple reasons effectively local government vehicles that avoid government debt limits and fund primarily government projects. Their debt does not 3/n
Read 11 tweets
Mar 28
This is a very good article and if I may say, I've been telling you this for a couple years. That said while continuing to say it is a very good article I would like to nibble at the edge of things I think are a little more important. First, making the transition from 1/n
Investment to consumption driven economy is not the matter of flipping a switch or changing some tax law but is literally just a little short remaking the entire economy. I don't think the magnitude of what is being asked is appreciated by these authors or others 2/n
Second, and the authors allude to this but I think still come up a little short in appreciating its importance, not only does Beijing not want to shift to a consumption driven economy but they really can not. Let me give you 2 simple examples. A. Assume (very simple example) 3/n
Read 7 tweets
Mar 11
Sure. Let me provide two examples. Trans-shipment example: China produces the t-shirts WITHOUT a made in label, ships the t-shirts to Vietnam, someone in Vietnam prints "Made in Vietnam", ships to US. In this case, the Chinese controlled company and its representative 1/n
a) do almost no work in Vietnam b) control the USD outside of China earned from exporting. Now let's tackle the arbitrage example. Let's assume (hyper simplistic example) that China can make t-shirts at $1 and Vietnam at $1.05. China however, faces a 10% tariff so their 2/n
T-shirts cost $1.10 in the US. Vietnam is better off arbitraging the spread here so what they do is: a) export all the t-shirts they make to the US b) buy t-shirts from China for their own consumption(people in Vietnam need t-shirts too). This pushes up t-shirt consumption 3/n
Read 5 tweets
Feb 21
This is an excellent follow up question to the Beijing move to centralize control over tech firms. This could easily house multiple dissertations but let me give you the broad outlines. First, 10-30 years ago centralization played minimal role in Chinese domination of 1/n
In fact, Chinese firms generally succeeded in spite of the state not because of it. Huawei legendarily had to fight for all kinds of things. Even sectors like low wage/skill garment manufacturers were not centralized but even were locked out of access to finance mostly 2/n
Second, Chinse centralization is multilayered and doesnt operate like people think. The most direct way China exercises central control not through input output directives (though they very much do in some cases) but more through channeling finance to preferred sectors 3/n
Read 12 tweets
Feb 6
So after this thread from yesterday, I had multiple people ask me a very reasonable question responding to the "how do you pay for it?" question. Why can't they just print money to bailout the bad loans? Totally fair question. Ready to get crazy? 1/n
Before we even dive in, especially when we look at the balance sheet expansions of like the Fed and BoJ, it makes perfect sense to use that as a framework to both ask the question and whether this could be applied in China. So let's review a couple of things specific to China 2/n
It is worth noting that while countries like China, Japan, and the US share some similarities in different areas (think demographics or bad debt) the severity of these problems are much worse in China. It's also worth noting, focusing on the finances, much worse relatively 3/n
Read 17 tweets
Feb 5
So since I see so many opeds from China and other places that China needs to bailout or public support for its stock market/banking/housing or other sector and these people have a pathological inability to understand second order conditions let me pose a simple question: 1/n
Now this is where it gets complicated so only Phd economists will understand my question: how do you pay for it? Since I'm feeling feisty let me impose a second crazy condition: how do you pay for it that actually accomplishes anything other than lighting money on fire? 2/n
So let's start with the first part: how do you pay for it? I can already hear the tourists and know nothing saying things like China has FX reserves, a sovereign wealth fund and SOEs they can sell off. For simplicity sake, let's assume the data is accurate 3/n
Read 15 tweets

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