Monday, October 23, 2017

Adair Turner — China vs. the Washington Consensus


Neoliberalism versus market socialism with Chinese characteristics. Which wins?

Since Deng introduced market socialism, China has been kicking butt in terms of growth rate, defying neoliberal predictions, while neoliberal economies have been mired since the 2008 crisis.

What's up with that? Adair Turner explains.

What is overlooks, however, is the history of the US, which adopted the American System over the British system as a result of Alexander Hamilton's influence and followed up with the National System of Friedrich List

China is following a similar path while hewing one that is suitable for the conditions that China faces. Seems to be working just like — like the US after the founding. Surprise.

Turner appears to be in the right ball park in contrast to most Western economists analyzing China, but even he seems to miss the obvious point that the huge and "potentially bad" debt extended by the state to state owned countries is actually public investment and that the only constraints are availability of real resources and inflation, neither of which presents any serious issues at present. Hand-wringing over this debt is comparable to hand-wriging over the size of the public debt of the US or Japan. It's irrelevant.

Project Syndicate
China vs. the Washington Consensus
Adair Turner

See also


China’s Contradictions
Stephen S. Roach

1 comment:

Matt Franko said...

" while neoliberal economies have been mired since the 2008 crisis."

Stagnant fiscal caused by the policy rate at 0.25% for 8 years and the QE tying up half the available bank capital to finance the CB assets that's been the problem...

Just starting to reverse now....