Is China a rich or poor country? 專貼給一部分不明中國實情的華人

來源: ERommel 2009-08-25 17:09:54 [] [博客] [舊帖] [給我悄悄話] 本文已被閱讀: 次 (5923 bytes)
BBC NEWS
Is China a rich or poor country?

By Chris Hogg
BBC News, Shanghai

The year 2009 could turn out to be a good one for China.

Recent economic data prompted some analysts to suggest it might already have reached the bottom of the current economic cycle. Many are expecting a recovery in the second half of the year.

If China's economy starts to recover earlier than those in other countries, it could challenge the assumptions we make about the world economic order.

Chinese companies, which are more cash rich than big corporations in some other countries, and with financial support from the government, have been scouring the globe for resources for some time now.

“ China's not a normal country - it's a huge empire, it's like the first world, the second world and the third world co-exist together ”
Andy Tsieh, "independent" economist

The global economic turmoil has offered them new opportunities to pick up under-valued assets elsewhere.

And yet this is a country that still receives hundreds of millions of dollars in aid from Western countries.

How should it be treated by the rest of the world then, as a "rich" country or a "poor" country, as one that needs to be helped or one whose economic strength we should fear?

Huge contrasts

From the top of Shanghai's tallest building, the World Financial Centre, tourists - most of them Chinese - gaze down on the city below them.

Rapid development in the past few years has created a skyline to rival that of Hong Kong's, New York's or Tokyo's.

Viewed from this height, Shanghai seems to be a rich, sophisticated, modern metropolis - and to a certain extent it is.

But at the foot of the tower it's a different story. You notice the pollution and the noise, the dirt and the traffic congestion.

“ If you live in the west or the centre of China, then you don't really see why the global community is demanding so much from us ”
Li Wei, Standard Chartered Bank

Close up, Chinese cities are not always so pleasant. This country is in a hurry to remake itself, and laws to control construction and development are sometimes not well enforced here.

Watching this rapid change, it's hard to judge how far this country has come.

Andy Tsieh, who describes himself as an "independent" economist, argues that China is no longer a poor country.

"In terms of trade, China is the largest trading nation in the world today," he points out.

"In terms of gross domestic product (GDP), China is likely to surpass Japan as the number two world economy either this year or next year."

But he accepts that China's size complicates matters, making it harder to judge how to deal fairly with the Chinese.

"China's not a normal country - it's a huge empire. It's like the first world, the second world and the third world co-exist together inside China.

"China is many things at the same time."

Endemic poverty

In big cities like Shanghai, first world China and third world China don't just co-exist, they collide.

At the foot of the World Financial Centre a woman kneels on the pavement begging, a hat in front of her, her forehead on the floor. She's ignored by most of the passers-by in their business suits.

Officials in China agonise over how to deal with poorer "out-of-towners" who come to cities like this looking for work, or just a better life. They cannot afford to help everyone.

Li Wei, an economist from Standard Chartered Bank in Shanghai, says that even though the country is getting richer, there are hundreds of millions who really struggle to get by.

The burden of caring for them is sometimes ignored by economists or politicians from overseas, when they ask China to pay more to support bodies such as the International Monetary Fund.

"If you live in the west or the centre of China, then you don't really see why the global community is demanding so much from us," he says.

"To them this may not even be a question. Their mind is on how to make a living every day, not how to help the world."

There are other reasons, too, why China might not be able to contribute more on the world stage, according to Prof Shen Dingli from Shanghai's Fudan University.

He argues that, even as the country has gained more wealth, it has lost a lot in other ways.

"We have amassed a huge amount of money, but we've caused a huge amount of ecological damage," he says.

"We have not had balanced, sustainable development, so I would conclude that China is still a poor country environmentally, ecologically and philosophically."

Challenge and opportunity

The World Bank groups China among lower to middle income countries like Bolivia, India and Syria.

At the moment though, China's economy is in much better shape than those of many Western countries which fear China's biggest corporations are now in a stronger position than ever before to take control of valuable assets, like mines, or other strategic assets, because the companies that own them are desperate for cash.

Chinese President Hu Jintao said recently that "challenge and opportunity always come together".

As we in the West fall more into debt, and our economies become weaker than they were before, questions about whether China is a behemoth that should be tamed, or a developing country that still needs our help, become less abstract and more pressing.

Judging what's fair, though, is almost impossible, depending as it does on what side of the negotiating table you're sitting on.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/asia-pacific/8035906.stm

Published: 2009/05/06 17:04:52 GMT

169; BBC MMIX





所有跟帖: 

Bolivia, India and Syria 小偷不少,中國也不例外 -ERommel- 給 ERommel 發送悄悄話 ERommel 的博客首頁 (145 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 17:18:05

London多. -咖啡屋的角落- 給 咖啡屋的角落 發送悄悄話 咖啡屋的角落 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 17:27:41

中國小偷還好吧, 沒怎麽遇到過....偷自行車的太多了.... -葉泥泥- 給 葉泥泥 發送悄悄話 葉泥泥 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 17:39:33

我們這兒也多,有次看報紙一個高中生投稿,笑死了 -千帆舞- 給 千帆舞 發送悄悄話 千帆舞 的博客首頁 (252 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 17:52:12

哪個國家? -ERommel- 給 ERommel 發送悄悄話 ERommel 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 18:00:17

回國一般打的或開車,不易碰到小偷,逛街邊小攤時, -ERommel- 給 ERommel 發送悄悄話 ERommel 的博客首頁 (14 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 17:55:08

咱無產,愛坐公交車,沒遇到/看到小偷,那段時間北京的治安真是好得很,不知道現在咋樣 -千帆舞- 給 千帆舞 發送悄悄話 千帆舞 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 17:59:50

你是說奧運其間吧?哪時小偷和警察有停火協議的 -ERommel- 給 ERommel 發送悄悄話 ERommel 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 18:03:01

不是噠,奧運前一兩年涅。。。。儂把停火協議給咱們招來看看樂樂吧 -千帆舞- 給 千帆舞 發送悄悄話 千帆舞 的博客首頁 (0 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 18:08:03

停火協議是在奧運前一兩年涅生效。。。,現在小偷可在 -ERommel- 給 ERommel 發送悄悄話 ERommel 的博客首頁 (16 bytes) () 08/25/2009 postreply 18:11:55

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