BIZCHINA> Review & Analysis
|
Optimism abounds amid crisis
By Chen Weihua (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-08-13 13:35 The global economic meltdown has burned many companies worldwide but merely served to fan the flames of economic optimism in China, as local consumers continue their wild shopping sprees, evening dinner parties and overseas tours with wild abandon. Unlike the vast majority of consumers in most countries, which have tightened their purse-strings and battened down the hatches, the Chinese mainland has been sending powerful shopping delegations to its top trading partners: North America, Europe and China's Taiwan province. It has also inked lucrative oil deals with Russia and Iran to pave the way for greater energy security. This sense of optimism has been further fueled by news that countries as far apart culturally and economically as Britain and Pakistan want to borrow money from China, which now has an estimated foreign reserve of up to $2 trillion. Nowadays, when senior US officials meet Chinese leaders, they seem less interested in chiding the country about its human rights issues than pushing the government to snap up more of their treasury bonds. In contrast to the situation only a few months ago, State-owned and private companies are also showing a keener interest in buying cheap overseas assets, as opposed to merely thanking the European Union and other foreign governments for stemming the tide of possible losses by limiting China's merger and acquisition efforts in previous years. Meanwhile, those who remember the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis feel lucky that the nation's currency is still not fully convertible, a situation that keeps it blissfully immune to attacks from the volatile world market. The situation has also been improving in a more tangible way on the home front, with much of the population benefiting from the government's 4-trillion-yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package, which has given birth to more-inclusive social security systems, better infrastructure and more rational industrial structure.
Corporate outlooks are similarly upbeat. The Entrepreneur Confidence Index, which measures the attitude of business executives to the economy, rose 9.1 percentage points in the second quarter (Q2) to 110.2, with the manufacturing, construction, transportation, wholesale, real estate, telecommunication, software and catering sectors leading the way. New data about China's GDP growth has filled investors and the general public with even greater confidence. Q2 growth of 7.9 percent has revised China's GDP growth rate in the first six months to 7.1 percent, making the government's original target of 8 percent for 2009 something of a distinct possibility. (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
|