freediver wrote on May 12
th, 2024 at 3:57pm:
A generation ago the Chinese people were all starving together on a roughly equal basis. They now have a greater wealth ddisparity than Australia, and a fraction of the income.
Your error exposed right there: you confuse the individual with the collective, as always; ie "they" - the collective - as opposed to the the rich individuals in China
Your first sentence is "rougly" correct; the 2nd fails to achnowledge there are now billionaires in China (as well as in Oz), and a Chinese middle class which is the largest in the world.
Quote:But I agree, China's economy is tanking under the current leadership, and the little pinks are celebrating because the rich are being harmed more than the poor.
Wrong again; the rich are fine, it's the middle class who are being pressured by US decoupling efforts and trade war (because of the US's fake "China threat" bs, really the inability of the US to compete with Chinese manufacturing).
Quote:You bring it up repeatedly, but it is just more meaningless propaganda that you blurt out without knowing what it means.
Hilarious, coming you who made the errors exposed above.
Quote:You really are utterly clueless, aren't you? This is from 7 years ago:
Your error there: 7 years ago was before the collapase of the private sector housing boom in China (ie, before the collapse of Evergrande).
Quote:https://www.smh.com.au/world/beijing-shanghai-shenzhen-the-cities-where-house-prices-rose-by-30-to-40-per-cent-20161003-grtwe6.html
In China, real estate prices are typically quoted on a per square-metre basis. Prices in central Beijing conservatively start at 80,000 yuan [about $16,000] per square metre, making even a nondescript, 100-square-metre, two-bedroom, previously owned apartment $1.6 million. New off-the-plan apartments within the city's fourth ring road sold in August for an average 15 million yuan, or close to $3 million, according to Chinese media reports. Across the country, prices rose in 64 of 70 major cities that month, according to official government data.
See the problem with using 7 year old data?
But no doubt some Chinese houses are big too, the problem is the
private sector real estate
get rich quick scheme in both China and Oz (using housing as investment vehicles, in lieu of government ensuring essential accomodation, beyond the private sector market).
Quote:In China, the average price to income ratio is approximately 29 - that is, you need 29 years salary to buy a property. This is despite the tiny sizes and poor quality in China. In Australia, we have the largest houses in the world, and people call it a "crisis" when the average price to income ratio is 8.
It IS a crises in Oz, which is why home ownership rates are falling in Oz; but your China stats display your usual error - there are still 700 million poor people in China (a developing country) who need 29 years to buy a home in a first tier city, but another 700 million from low middle class to rich status, some of whom who are more able to do so, having salaries more like 8 to 1.
Quote:https://www.ozpolitic.com/album/forum-attachments/gdp_per_capita.PNGThis isn't your imagination TGD, this is real. And back when the CCP was starving 50 million Chinese people to death by trying to feed them all equally,
they somehow managed to convince them to feel sorry for the westerners who were even worse off. You can kind of forgive their ignorance, as they were literally kept in the dark and threatened with death for asking the wrong questions. But no-one can explain the gullibility of today's little pinks.
Absurd rhetoric. The CCP back then were devoted to convincing them of the virtues of communism, whereas today the Chinese people are amazed by the failure of the 'Beacon on the Hill' to achieve stable, progressive governance (witness the Capitol riots at the end of Trump's presidency).
And I have already explained the gullibility of "today's little pinks" - they fell
hook line and sinker - like Deng - for the free market as master, rather than as servant.
"The markets are good servants. but bad masters, and a worse religion" Amory Lovins.