Coming China collapse?
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@taiwan_girl has been preaching this for a while.
Gonna be an interesting (!) 5 years.
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And...one thing that worries me is the bullying that China is doing. Not only with US aircraft, but with various vessels at sea.
Then, there's the artificial islands they have created.
This all seems like posturing for a major conflict - it'll be, in the long run, good for their economy, they hope.
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Stock investments: down 30%. Salary package: down 30%. Investment property: down 20%. As Thomas Zhou reflects on 2023, his household finances are front of mind.
“It’s just heart-breaking,” the 40-year-old financial worker from Shanghai said. “The only thing that still keeps me going is the thought of keeping my job so I can support my big family.”
Zhou’s predicament will resonate with many people in China, where slumps in the real estate and stock markets are wiping away household wealth.And as the world’s second-largest economy struggles to regain momentum after years of Covid-19 lockdowns, there’s also the growing threat of unemployment.
Now, middle class households are being forced to rethink their money priorities, with some pulling away from investing, or selling assets to free-up liquidity.
At the heart of the decline in family wealth is China’s real estate meltdown, which having a pervasive effect on a society where 70% of family assets are tied up in property. Every 5% decline in home prices will wipe out 19 trillion yuan ($2.7 trillion) in housing wealth, according to Bloomberg Economics.
“It might just be the beginning of more wealth losses in coming years,” said Eric Zhu, an economist with Bloomberg Economics. “Unless there’s a big bull market, small gains in financial wealth are unlikely to offset losses in housing wealth.”While China’s official data show just a mild drop in its existing home prices, evidence from property agents and private data providers indicate declines of at least 15% in prime areas in its biggest cities.
The housing sector’s value may shrink to about 16% of China’s gross domestic product by 2026 from around 20% of GDP currently, according to Bloomberg Economics. This would put about 5 million people, or about 1% of urban workforce, at the risk of unemployment or reduced incomes.
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@Jolly One of the problems is that a lot of the developments are only half finished.
Or, if they are finished, no money for maintenance, management, etc.
Kind of like the US housing "bubble" people in China bought not because they wanted a place to live, but as an investment. Now, those people are seeing that their investment is not so good any more. Demographic changes (population getting older and older) make the future outlook not so good anymore either.
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I am a big fan of legal immigration. The only reason the US is not like some other industrial countries (falling population, rapid aging population) is because of immigration. As mentioned above, it is a big problem in North Asia (China, Korea, Japan, Taiwan).