Micro Lenders

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 2 February 2012

Attn Deficit Lovers: Why China Should Rule World

Posted on 00:39 by Unknown
Balancing one's budget is the most fundamental money management task one faces. If there's eomething that so graphically illustrates Western decline, it is the inability to do anything other than run up massive debts that are a burden on future generations, all the while spouting all sorts of utterly contemptible free lunch stories of the "deficits don't matter" variety. Who knows? Maybe it's in the American genes.

With that in mind, it's heartening to hear that Hong Kong is having an old lady in a shoe-type problem when it comes to government finances. It has so many revenues it doesn't know what to do. Let's just say success begets success instead of the other way around. In contrast to various Western wasteleands alike the Washington wonderless-land, it's running out of ideas about how to redistribute a bountiful largesse. A fiscal surplus; what a concept:
The United States is shrinking its military and debating whether to cut social spending, raise taxes or both. European governments from Greece to Ireland are struggling to maintain payments to the unemployed and retirees. Japan is borrowing heavily to pay for earthquake reconstruction and care for a graying population.

And then there is Hong Kong.

Financial Secretary John Tsang announced a budget for the coming fiscal year that cuts income taxes, corporate taxes and real estate taxes. Household electricity bills will be subsidized, and people living in public housing will receive two months’ free rent.

Education spending will jump 7 percent. Senior citizens will receive an extra month’s pension payment; government hospitals will expand; and 10 billion Hong Kong dollars, or $1.29 billion, will be put in a special fund to help the needy buy medicine.

Perhaps most impressive, the budget is forecast to be roughly in balance – and Hong Kong’s budget forecasters have a reputation for consistently underestimating surpluses. The city, an autonomous region of China ever since Britain handed it back in 1997, has accumulated a rainy-day fund equal to more than a year and a half of government spending.

Hong Kong is running another large budget surplus for the current year, which ends on March 31, despite giving 6,000 dollars to each adult permanent resident. Economists attribute the bonanza to a series of factors: tight limits on senior citizen spending, no military spending and an economy that grew 5 percent last year, mostly because Hong Kong has cashed in on China’s economic boom.
Reuters has more on the specifics. It begs the question: Given the influence of Westerners at international financial institutions alike development agencies, what right do they have to teach LDCs about running a country? No one except the most imperceptive Yankee dolt would champion their nation spilling endless amounts of red ink as a global exemplar. No one respects a bankrupt since a bankrupt lacks self-respect by getting into such dire financial straits to begin with.

As a student of political economy, I humbly suggest that closer attention be paid to the China's example. Cheneynomic apologists aside, their money-management skills look far superior to those of their Western counterparts who still believe in the white man's burden via their laughable freedom 'n' growth shtick.

To paraphrase our very own Martin Jacques, what exactly is there to fear When China Rules the World compared to today's example of assorted Western spendthrifts and prodigals? It's a no-brainer. With which will you gain more spillover effects and positive externalities? Take your pick--do you want to be Atlanta or Hong Kong? Having something of a brain left, I'll go for the latter, thank you very much.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in Cheneynomics, China, Development | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Today's Resource Curse on Aussie Surfboard Mfg
    Little surfer, little one, make my heart come all undone...with your"Made in China" surfboard? Is there nothing sacred about beach...
  • Yay! Our LSE IDEAS, World's 4th Best Uni Thinktank
    Well here's a nice bit of news concerning LSE IDEAS , the research centre I am associated with. The good folks at the University of Penn...
  • Globocop No More: United States After Unipolarity
    LSE IDEAS has been churning out special reports at such a furious pace that I almost forgot to mention this one concerning The United State...
  • Fake Diploma? Be Ecuador's Next CenBank Chief!
    Ah, Ecuador...the archetypal banana republic. For a country that supposedly loathes the United States via its leader Rafael Correa and his a...
  • Commercialism & Christmas in Non-Christian Societies
    Thailand features Christmas elephants, f'rinstance Your Asian correspondent--obviously Catholic with a name like "Emmanuel"--h...
  • Egypt and the Elusive Interest-Free IMF Loan
    Back in the 80s, I loved Aldo Nova's one-hit wonder " Fantasy ." Instead of treating it as a catchy tune and nothing more, I...
  • How Scuderia Ferrari Improved a Hospital ICU [!]
    Longtime readers will know from my blog FAQs that I am most excited about the field of IPE borrowing from different social science discipli...
  • Lamborghini Aventador, US-Subsidized Supercar
    Now for one of my occasional Robb Report impersonations--albeit with an IPE twist. (We've got style, baby.) In 1998, Lamborghini becam...
  • Patrice Lumumba Friendship University Revisited
    Younger readers probably don't know what the USSR's Patrice Lumumba Friendship University was, so a short introduction is required. ...
  • The Myth of the Inflexible Chinese Communist Party
    Some of you may be familiar with the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission (USCC) that was created by the American congress in 2...

Categories

  • Africa
  • Agriculture
  • Americana
  • Anti-Globalization
  • APEC
  • Bretton Woods Twins
  • Caribbean
  • Casino Capitalism
  • Cheneynomics
  • China
  • Commodities
  • Credit Crisis
  • CSR
  • Culture
  • Currencies
  • Demography
  • Development
  • ds Twins
  • Economic Diplomacy
  • Economic History
  • Education
  • Egypt
  • Energy
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Europe
  • FDI
  • Gender Equality
  • Governance
  • Health
  • Hegemony
  • IMF
  • India
  • Innovation
  • Internet Governance
  • Japan
  • Labor
  • Latin America
  • Litigation
  • Marketing
  • Media
  • Microfinance
  • Middle East
  • Migration
  • Mining
  • MNCs
  • Neoliberalism
  • Nonsense
  • Religion
  • Russia
  • Security
  • Service Announcement
  • Socialism
  • Soft Power
  • South Asia
  • South Korea
  • Southeast Asia
  • Sports
  • Supply Chain
  • Trade
  • Travel
  • Underground Economy
  • United Nations
  • World Bank

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (183)
    • ►  December (15)
    • ►  November (17)
    • ►  October (19)
    • ►  September (21)
    • ►  August (14)
    • ►  July (17)
    • ►  June (16)
    • ►  May (8)
    • ►  April (9)
    • ►  March (13)
    • ►  February (14)
    • ►  January (20)
  • ▼  2012 (242)
    • ►  December (21)
    • ►  November (25)
    • ►  October (15)
    • ►  September (17)
    • ►  August (20)
    • ►  July (16)
    • ►  June (17)
    • ►  May (21)
    • ►  April (16)
    • ►  March (20)
    • ▼  February (26)
      • Government Motors, Peugeot's Would-Be "Saviour"
      • Thou Shalt Obey Thy Lord Mandy on Globalization
      • I [Heart] Empire: "Hong Kong Better Under Brits"
      • Japan Ponders Limits of National Superindebtedness
      • PIIGs in a Blanket: IMF & Reverse Robin Hood
      • Onshoring--You Macho Enough to Make in the USA?
      • Pro Death: US Congress Ponders Aborting Ex-Im Bank
      • Ranking World's Largest Container Port Operators
      • Egypt's Beer- & Bikini-Approving Muslim Brotherhood
      • 3 Cheers for Austerity: Iceland is Investment Grade
      • The Race is On to Succeed Zoellick at World Bank
      • TPP is Ludicrous: US Auto, Canadian Agri Edition
      • Day's EU Analogy: Greece 2012 = Versailles 1919
      • Not-So-Still Life: A Greek Riot Scene
      • Revisiting WWII, or When Adidas Made Bazookas
      • Asian Values 2012: Dr Mahathir Kicks West's Hiney
      • Poland's Bid to Become a European Big Beast
      • Kagan the American Exceptionalist Versus Math
      • Fat Chance Saloon: Japan Joining the TPP PTA
      • Choking Iran: Asian Dealings & Its IMF Membership
      • Capturing LSE Involvement in the London Riots
      • IMF Tries a Little Tenderness w/ Greece, Others
      • RMB Internationalization's Coming Along Fine, TY
      • Ry Cooder's Fine Soundtrack to American Decline
      • Attn Deficit Lovers: Why China Should Rule World
      • Asshat Stripping: RBS' Fred Goodwin De-Knighted
    • ►  January (28)
  • ►  2011 (75)
    • ►  December (23)
    • ►  November (21)
    • ►  October (27)
    • ►  September (4)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile