Posted on 12/19/2007 3:07:49 PM PST by nuconvert
The Chinese Economy Hoax and Other Economists' Fables
Michael Ledeen
A few years ago, when I was a member of something called The U.S.-China Strategic Review Commission (or so I remember it), we issued reports on Chinas economy, military strategy, and political situation. In each of the first two such reports (I left the Commission before the third came out, and confess that I havent kept up with them) we took pains to state that the official data issued by the Chinese Government were totally unreliable. Indeed, we stated explicitly that the numbers were simply made up.
Now the World Bank has issued a dramatic reevaluation of the dimensions of the Chinese economy, and the Bank says that previous estimates overstated the facts by forty percent, which is a hefty number.
Take a look at this excellent editorial from Investors Business Daily, while spells it out very clearly, and draws some very important conclusions.
It seems the Bank may have found a reliable metric for measuring the real output of a society, and I wonder if theyve done the same for countries like Iran and Syria and Saudi Arabia. Im going to ask them, but you might look around as well. We need what my kids used to call true facts, not official numbers, which are sometimes produced on demand to satisfy one audience or another.
Back when I was reporting on Italywere talking mid-seventiesmy editor demanded that I get the real numbers on the Italian economy, since the official numbers showed that Italy was dead on arrival. I told him the Italian economy was fine, based on walking tours of various neighborhoods in Rome, Florence and Bologna. But he wanted numbers. So I visited a friend who was then Minister of Finance, and I explained my mission. He smiled happily and asked me what numbers would your editor like?
Ever since, Ive been touched at the faith people show in official data
It’s true that Chinese government statistics are unreliable, but unlike the Soviets, they tend to be underestimating rather than overestimating. The main reason for this is that China wants the world to think it’s a developing country (to get aid and also less flak for things like global warming and pegged currency exchange rate). This World Bank revision just gives the Chinese an excuse NOT to appreciate their currency.
I'd be shocked if that were the case.
There’s a reason why the Soviet Union has collapsed and China is still around. The economic growth in China is very much real and tangible, it’s not just a statistical maneuver. You don’t even need to travel to China to see it.
Yes, they have real growth. I'd be shocked if it was close to the numbers released by the Chinese government.
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