New on the site this time:
Two pieces on the Chinese economy, both sparked by the massive intervention of China’s central bank into the Chinese stock market on September 24, the effects of which are being followed by China-watchers everywhere. I was in China for the month of September, and my broad impression is that people in general were less tense than last year, when many were still reeling from the effects of the sudden end of China’s zero-covid policy at the end of 2022. At the same time, many Chinese seem definitively convinced that the boom is over and hard times are coming. Sun Liping’s blog post, “Rethinking Some of My Ideas in the Light of the Current Situation,” reflects this pessimism. He seems resigned to the possibility that China may go through something like Japan’s “30 lost years,” during which China can solve its overcapacity problem and rethink what kind of economy it wants. By contrast, Zhao Yanjing (“With the Huge Turmoil in the Stock Market, China’s Economy Reaches its Most Perilous Moment”) remains confident that if the central bank holds firm, government intervention can shock China’s economy out of the moribund state in which is currently finds itself. Enjoy! |
About this siteThis web site is devoted to the subject of intellectual life in contemporary China, and more particularly to the writings of establishment intellectuals. What you will find here are essentially translations of texts my collaborators and I consider important. Click here for tips on getting the most out of the site. Click here for the 15 most popular translations, and here for my personal favorites. Archives
October 2024
Categories
|
This materials on this website are open-access and are published under a Creative Commons 3.0 Unported licence. We encourage the widespread circulation of these materials. All content may be used and copied, provided that you credit the Reading and Writing the China Dream Project and provide a link to readingthechinadream.com.