Investor confidence in China’s troubled property sector has been rocked again this week by reports that one of the country’s largest private building conglomerates missed interest payments on two bonds.

    • tal
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      1 year ago

      I have to say that of all things in China for Marxist-Lenninists to be defending, the Chinese urban real estate sector of 2023 seems like a pretty odd choice.

      • teft
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        101 year ago

        Read up on the concept of “face” in asian cultures. China doesn’t like it when they appear weak or stupid. In any arena.

    • teft
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      121 year ago

      Happens anytime you mention anything bad and china. The apologists and downvoters come out and play. Same thing used to happen on reddit.

    • @greyfrog
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      21 year ago

      That’s pretty rude. I’m all for critism where it is due but seems like in any article about China rather than discussing the article we use the article to prove our preconceived notion is truth.

      Same as I don’t automatically believe any article I read about UK/US/Europe.

  • teft
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    201 year ago

    Building ghosts cities to hold 30 million people and then not filling them. Who would have thought that’s not a valid strategy for property management?

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Some are, but not all. The point here is building entire towns or entire new city sectors in one fell swoop instead of planning them out and building them in stages so plans can be adjusted as needs inevitably change is a bad idea. It’s things like this that have directly led to the current property market crisis.

        Of course if buildings are already there it makes sense to use them, but they might have been able to put something better suited or more economically viable there if they had staggered the construction.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Your propaganda is a decade out of date. If you actually read the article, the current issue is that a lot of people aren’t receiving the housing they prepaid for.

      Aside from that, I’ll take “too much housing” over the hell world of trying to find a place to live in the US any day of the week. The ghost cities complaint always seemed like coping to me.

      • @thebestaquaman
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        51 year ago

        a lot of people aren’t receiving the housing they prepaid for.

        the hell world of trying to find a place to live in the US.

        Your propaganda

        I’ll just leave this here for you to think about.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        You are correct, the “ghost city” claim is about a decade old and in the time since then good functioning cities developed incorporating those infrastructure and urban resources built previously.

        Zhujiang New Town for example can house up to two million people (often moving out from the 7-10 million living in the old areas) and while I dislike the urban planing of it, it was once among the foremost called “ghost city” in propaganda, yet it is larger than most cities in most states of the US as example.

        I also agree that having too many flats seems to not be that bad a problem to have. Especially when 2‰ of the US are unhoused - even though there are millions of empty flats.

        • @jumperalex
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          31 year ago

          Right up until the demand for housing turns flat and then negative due to unquestionable demographic realities facing China. When such a huge percentage of the populations net worth is tied to real estate, the impact of a housing crash can’t be ignored. And there is a storm coming, the numbers don’t lie. In the next 20 years China’s population WILL shrink

          https://www.salon.com/2023/07/30/chinas-great-leap-backward-so-much-for-the-next-dominant-superpower/

          https://www.huffpost.com/entry/china-population-drop_n_63c69f7be4b0cbfd55f616e2

          https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2023/08/03/china-will-become-less-populous-more-productive-and-more-pricey

          • @[email protected]
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            -11 year ago

            The numbers will sink in the next 20 years for pretty much all “developed” OECD countries. Including the US, UK, France, Germany… yet how often do you personally write about that problem? When even people like professor Reich of Berkeley mention the 40(?) trillion $ wealth transfer due to shrinking population and that mostly to a small group of population with reduced demand for housing you seem to focus a lot on a country you are not living in.

            Do I think China faces challenges? Surely. Do I think the capitalist market oriented parts of it will lead to problems that are integral to capitalist market systems? Sure. The CPC has much more power to act on it though. China is currently able to house its population much better than 30 years ago after the crisis of the fall of the Soviet Union. Germany’s capital is missing 600k affordable flats at the same time.

            Lets see how things will play out, but similar articles were published every couple of months for the last 20 something years. That generates sentiment.

            • @jumperalex
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              11 year ago

              The difference between those OECD countries is that they allow migration. Nationalistic and racist temper tantrums notwithstanding, those countries are bolstering their working age ranks with migrants. China is distinctly anti-migration. So they’ve been digging a giant hole that’s going to take a LOT to fill. And they haven’t even stopped digging yet (first rule of getting out of a hole!)

              So, could China change that stance as a way to mitigate the issue? Sure. But they better up their human rights record or they are only going to attract the most desperate of migrant with no other options. That doesn’t bode well for a strong economic engine. Though cheap exploitable labor does help [shrug]

      • @Astroturfed
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        21 year ago

        Their housing market is still unaffordable for Chinese citizens. Rather be in an unaffordable housing market where I get what I pay for. Like the house, that I’m typing this in. Which I paid for, and then got the keys to.

  • @TenderfootGungi
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    161 year ago

    They have a tightly controlled economy. The government will do whatever it takes to keep a default from spinning out of control.

  • Jaysyn
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    151 year ago

    “Oh no, it’s the consequences of my misgovernment.”

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?date=all&q=china crisis

    Seems China is always in Crisis according to Western news. The consequences seem to not be there though.

    Instead wages increased threefold within ten years. It is funny that the Isle of Man got the most searches for “china crisis”, I would guess cause it is a tax haven and therefore sensitive to such “news”?

    Without joking, China did manage to succeed through ten crisis and you can read Wen Tiejun’s book about it

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      Today: a weatern basement-dweller furiously defends a murderous authoritarian regime, while eating a burger and shit-posting on the world-wide(almost)-web.

      In other news, there’s water in the ocean.

      • @MicroWaveOP
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        1 year ago

        They’re posting from lemmygrad.ml, so that should give you an idea.

        The article literally quotes Chinese state media’s report on the matter.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Touch grass, you project stronger than the Leica Cine 1. If the admins would do your job your comment would be deleted already. Click my link, does that look like there are often news about crisis that don’t come to fruition? Sure does. Do you disagree with the book you can receive from Springer Link?

        While property dealings can have effects (look at my link at see at 2008/9 how impactful the financial crisis from the US was even for China), the article doesn’t manage to break beyond the general sentiment. Articles like that are often followed by high noise low signal comments which mirror sentiment of the user base, in this case mostly US dwellers that are underemployed. So a bit Sinophobia is expected, likely with topics related to property, so “Ghost cities”, “expropriations”, “shady construction” while using standards the people don’t actually hold up in regards to their own countries.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 year ago
          1. I’m not clicking any link that comes from a lemmygrad.ml user, lol. It’s like licking a handrail in a metro station.
          2. This is not hexbear, nor lemmygrad, people are alowed to laugh at tankies.
          3. Become a journalist and write an article in CNN, maybe I’ll read it then. Until then, I’m not interested in lemmygrad blabberings.
    • @jumperalex
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      1 year ago

      Their population demographics are a problem that is going to be much harder to manage. If they succeed, good on them for figuring it out. But they’ve managed because they’ve had fresh population to feed into their economy. That is NOT going to happen going forward. So they better change their strategy.

      Honestly, I hope they do for the sake of the human beings living on that piece of earth currently ruled by the CCP. I actually wish them no ill will and the rest of the world is likely to suffer if china has a full on collapse.

      And yet still, fuck the CCP.

    • @JustAManOnAToilet
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      01 year ago

      To be fair I mean it’s called the Isle of Man, of course people are going to Google it.