• Does China Really Pick Winners?

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Mon Dec 19 00:04:12 2022
    Does China Really Pick Winners?
    By The Editorial Board, Dec. 14, 2022, WSJ

    Many in Congress believe industrial policy is China’s economic secret, but what if that’s not true? That’s the lesson in a notable new paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research, which finds that China’s government subsidies for business
    have little positive effect, and sometimes the opposite.

    In “Government Subsidies and Firm Productivity in China,” authors Lee G. Branstetter, Guangwei Li and Mengjia Ren found “little evidence that the Chinese government consistently ‘picks winners.’”

    Since 2007 all companies listed on any Chinese stock exchange have had to provide an accounting of subsidies. The authors looked at the subsidies and how they compared with a calculation of a company’s productivity over time. The idea was to see if
    Beijing is giving to firms that are already more productive, as well as if subsidies encouraged the firms to become more productive.`

    The answer to both questions is no, and the authors looked at subsidies including those for research and development and industrial or equipment upgrades. Direct subsidies to Chinese companies overall grew to $29 billion in 2018 from $4 billion in 2007,
    but there was no plan to invest systematically in dynamic firms to supercharge their success.

    Instead, the researchers found that Chinese subsidies may be vulnerable to special-interest politics and went to favored groups or to stabilize employment or industries in decline. “At the aggregate level,” the authors write, “subsidies seem to be
    allocated to less productive firms, and the relative productivity of firms’ receiving these subsidies appears to decline further after disbursement.”

    Talk about myth busting. This should quell anxiety that Beijing’s state-directed allocation of capital is working for China, much less is a model for anyone else.

    In a companion paper, Messrs. Branstetter and Li also examine President Xi Jinping’s signature “Made in China 2025” investments. They note that, although the “innovation promotion” subsidies went to companies in such politically favored
    industries as electric vehicles and computer chips, the recipients saw “little statistical evidence of productivity improvement or increases in R&D expenditure, patenting, and profitability.”

    Some of this will sound familiar to readers who recall the U.S. fretting about Japan’s government-led growth model in the 1980s. In Japan, the researchers write, “the preponderance of support had not gone to the sectors or firms with the fastest
    productivity growth” but to shore up “politically connected but economically weak firms and industries.” We know how that turned out.

    China is a formidable economic competitor, but the key to its success is the energy and ingenuity of its people, not central planning and state subsidies. The strength of the U.S. system is free-market competition and a rule of law that allow innovation
    and the private allocation of capital. Washington won’t subsidize any more wisely than Beijing does.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/does-china-really-pick-winners-national-bureau-of-economic-research-study-industrial-policy-xi-jinping-11671060303

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  • From stoney@21:1/5 to David P. on Mon Jan 2 01:27:49 2023
    On Monday, December 19, 2022 at 4:04:13 PM UTC+8, David P. wrote:
    Does China Really Pick Winners?
    By The Editorial Board, Dec. 14, 2022, WSJ

    China is a formidable economic competitor, but the key to its success is the energy and ingenuity of its people, not central planning and state subsidies. The strength of the U.S. system is free-market competition and a rule of law that allow
    innovation and the private allocation of capital. Washington won’t subsidize any more wisely than Beijing does.


    US free market competition is not true.

    For example, big tech buying over startups in order to take control of them from market competition and from taking off to replace them. Ash facebook or now called a Meta, Google, Oracle, Intel, and many more big techs.

    Rule of law is also not true.

    Who sets the rules, actually? Seriously, rule of law is set by president signing instant law called executive order. For example, Executive Order was signed to force TIKTOK to sell to American companies within 100 days.

    Oracle and Walmart quickly and greedily went to force an sale negotiation with TikToK. TikToK escaped from enforced acquisition Executive Order was, when appealed, the US court threw out the presidential order saying there was not merit of threat to US
    national security order signed as reasons by the president Executive Order.

    The problem is what if the US court sided with the presidential executive order, the enforced sales of Tik Tok would have gone from the Chinese company to any of the two US companies, Oracle or Walmart.

    Is this rule of law of US is considered a rule of arbitrarily law of US?.



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