Connect to share and comment

China moving 700 mountains to build new city in desert (VIDEO)

China Daily reports the gross-domestic product of the area could increase to 50 billion yuan ($8 billion) by 2015.

China economy: What's the big deal about 8 percent GDP?

Economic analysis meets numerology in the world's second largest economy.
Chinese lanterns economyEnlarge
Decorative red lanterns are hung on trees at a temple to celebrate the Lunar New Year of the Dragon January 22, 2012 in Beijing, China. (Feng Li/Getty Images)
This is the sixth straight quarter that China's economy has slowed, and the country's GDP is now well-below 8 percent — or the number that's ritualistically repeated by China-watchers as being necessary to keep employment up, and social protests down. Or is it? And what's the big deal about 8 percent GDP, anyway?
More

China cranks up the export machine

Facing a slowdown at home, China turns to its factory workers.
China factory worker 2011 09 01Enlarge
A worker assembles small soccer balls at the production line of Ball Star Toys Co., Ltd. in Guangzhou on Sept. 4, 2007 in Guangzhou, China. (Feng Li/AFP/Getty Images)

If you're obsessed with the Chinese economy — and let's face it, if you're reading this blog post then you've got more than a passing interest in the topic — then Sunday was a particularly interesting day.

That's because the Chinese government announced that exports surged 15.3 percent in May from a year ago.

That's double what economists were expecting.

It's also the biggest month ever for Chinese exports.

The announcement comes as China's domestic economy continues to slow. The export boom could help preserve the jobs of millions of workers who toil in Chinese factories. 

Think of it as China using its secret weapon: factories that have been well-tooled to outcompete others around the world in terms of labor productivity and efficiency, even as Europe tanks and the US economy shows new signs of weakness.

The New York Times has a smart overview today of the situation, which highlights long-term investments in productivity measures and short-term currency movements as the catalyst for the export surge.

The US has been the main market for Chinese stuff. Exports to America rose 23 percent from a year ago.

They were up a paltry 3.2 percent to debt-ridden Europe.

As the Times reporter Keith Bradsher points out, the export surge is likely to play a role in the race for the White House:

More

China GDP: The real number to watch

In China, it's all about the spending.
China economy slowsEnlarge
A Chinese stock investor checks his share prices at a security firm in Hefei, east China's Anhui province on February 22, 2012. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

There have been plenty of headlines today about China's latest economic report.

And for good reason: what happens in China, the world's second largest economy after the US, matters to the rest of the planet.

So here's the quick news:

The country's gross domestic product slowed to 8.1 percent in the first quarter of this year.

That's the slowest rate in three years.

Even more troubling was how that number looks on a quarter-by-quarter comparison.

By that measure China's economy is growing at a rate that's below the government's target for the year.

All of this is made more urgent by this year's leadership change in Beijing, an uneasy political transition underlined by the stunning fall of former Chinese Communist Party boss Bo Xilai, which this week took yet another surprising twist.

But the economic news out of Beijing today isn't all bad.

In fact, in one very important way things are going exactly as planned.

Here's why:

More
Syndicate content