Pull aside the
curtain and what you find is a China crippled by corruption and debt
by Charles Hugh Smith
Does China have what it takes to get from
here (industrialized export economy) to there (sustainable growth, widespread
prosperity)? The same can be asked of every nation: do
they have what it takes to move beyond their current limitations to the next
level?
Let's
start with the fundamentals, what every nation must have to establish a stable,
sustainable, widely shared prosperity. These are not just ethical
niceties--these are the foundation of economic security.
Consider
corruption.
Corruption isn't just a "values" issue: corrupt societies have
corrupt economies, and these economies are severely limited by that corruption. A
deeply, pervasively corrupt economy cannot get from here to there.
Corruption acts as
a "tax" on the economy, siphoning money from the productive to the
parasitic unproductive Elites skimming the bribes, payoffs, protection money,
unofficial "fees," etc. By definition, the money skimmed by
corruption reduces the disposable income of households and enterprises,
reducing their consumption and investment.
"Income"
derived from corruption is the classic example of "unearned" feudal
rights being imposed on serfs, a broad-based "tax" that keeps them
impoverished.
The
other side of the corruption coin is transparency: thus it is no surprise that Transparency
International is the organization that monitors
corruption globally and that issues its annual The Corruption
Perceptions Index that ranks countries/territories based on
how corrupt their public sector is perceived to be.
The top of the
least--most transparent, least corrupt--are Denmark, New Zealand, Singapore,
Finland and Sweden, with Canada, Netherlands, Australia, Switzerland and Norway
close behind.
Germany ranks 15,
Japan 17, Chile 21, the U.S. 22, France 25, Spain 30, Souyth Korea 39, Italy
67, Brazil 69, China 78, India 87, Egypt and Mexico, tied at 98, Indonesia 110,
Vietnam 116, Syria and Uganda, tied at 127, Azerbaijan 134, Iran 146, Russia
154, and at the bottom of the list (or the top if we are measuring corruption),
Iraq, Afghanistan, Myanmar and Somalia at 175 - 178.
There is no way for
a deeply corrupt society to get from here (their current level of development)
to there (a higher level of development) becausecorruption limits two essential components of
sustainable growth and widespread prosperity: social mobility and innovation.
In corrupt
societies, potentially profitable innovations are quickly stolen, copied, pirated
or appropriated by corrupt officials and/or criminal cartels. The innovator
cannot reap the fruits of his innovation. His only choice is to move to a
nation that offers him the freedom to develop his ideas and drive and keep the
yield for himself and his family.
If we were to
remove every immigrant and their children from the list of influential
innovators, entrepreneurs and inventors who have expanded the wealth of the
U.S., the list would likely be cut in half.
Since we have many
friends in China and India, the two giant economies that many expect to
dominate the global economy in the 21st century, we are intimately aware of the
pervasive nature of corruption in these societies and economies. If you want to
go to dental college in India, for example, you do not need to be a good
student; a bribe will do the trick.
This means someone
who would have qualified for a slot based on merit is denied the chance in
favor of the incompetent who can pay the bribe. Not only does this limit social
mobility of the talented and motivated--the very people you want to succeed--it
seeds your entire economy with incompetence, laziness and abuse of power.
In China, the way
to get a driver's license is not to learn how to drive--what a bother that is!
You get the license by paying a bribe. That may be one reason why the death
toll from traffic accidents is horrendous in China.
If you work in an
upper-level position in an SOE--state-owned enterprise, still the heart of the
Chinese economy--much of your salary may be paid as a lump-sum
"bonus" that is issued at the whim of your boss. If you alienate your
boss, you may not get a bonus or it will not reflect the value you added to the
organization that year. This is why young Chinese workers must spend their
hard-earned money on Coach-brand handbags to be given to the boss's wife
whenever they go abroad, even if they know the wife already has five overpriced
"luxury brand" handbags.
Though the luxury
item is likely made in China, and the knock-off available on the street corner
is identical in look and feel, they have to buy the "name brand," for
it is the high cost that matters. In effect, lower-rank employees are paying
$800 for the store bag that says "this is the real deal."
The boss,
meanwhile, skims enormous sums in "fees" from the enterprises'
contracts. His official salary might be $30,000 a year, and he collects 10 or
20 times that in "fees"--or if he is especially enterprising, 100
times his official salary.
You will never hear
the truth about the way things really work in China unless the person trusts
you--something that takes years to develop. No wonder Westerners who fly in for
swank briefings based on lies are so clueless about the Chinese economy.
This is
why $300 billion is leaving China every year and flowing to more transparent
nations such as Canada, Australia and the U.S. Those who have done the skimming know
their wealth--and maybe their lives--are increasingly at risk. So they're
getting out while the getting is good, and buying houses and visas for their
offspring overseas. China's in big trouble - should U.S. worry?
Reliable estimates from journalists and
economists published in October place the amount leaving the country at between
$225 billion and $300 billion over the last year - 3 to 4 percent of China's
economic output for the period. That is so even though moving significant
amounts out of the country is strictly illegal. The outflow is growing larger
every year, just as the GDP continues to fall - not a coincidence.
Anecdotally, this
probably grossly underestimates the real sums being transferred abroad: if
insiders are guessing $300 billion, the true total may be much higher.
This is
the other cost of a lack of transparency: all the critical information and data is
opaque. How can anyone operate a business when the true nature of conditions is
unknowable? You can't, or you make decisions based on dodgy data that ends up
crippling your enterprise.
As noted here before in In a Dysfunctional Status
Quo, Reform Triggers Collapse: corruption isn't a feature of the
economy of China: corruption is the economy. I recommend reading these recent
news reports to fully understand the hopelessness of "reforming"
corruption in China.
Reform unlikely, says China expert Roderick
MacFarquhar (via Maoxian)
MacFarquhar, a professor of history and
political science at Harvard University, said the vested interests of the
political elite were so entrenched in a corrupt system that an overhaul would
amount to dismantling the regime.
Despite hopes the regime can peacefully
transform itself into a democracy with rule of law, MacFarquhar said he could
not see such a transition, which would require the ruling elite to give up its
power and privileges.
Although a political system's inertia
often meant a fragile regime could exist for years, MacFarquhar said
unpredictable circumstances could trigger its collapse. "You don't know
what can unseat a fragile system," he said.
Growing Concerns in China about Inequality, Corruption (Pew Research Center)
The Chinese Credit Bubble (Zero Hedge)
It is here that we get the first glimpse
of the true sheer extent of the Chinese credit bubble, which as the chart below
shows, is already the largest in the entire world.
Pull aside the
curtain and what you find is a China crippled by corruption and debt.
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