China’s rate of inflation has hit an 11-year high, partly due to the cold winter weather destroying crops and pushing up food prices. However, inflationary pressure has been growing for some time with rapid economic growth and the resultant pressure on resources. This is despite six increases in interest rates in the past thirteen months.
Families feel pinch as inflation threatens economic miracle Guardian (25/2/08)
Chinese inflation soars to an 11-year high Times Online (20/2/08)
Chinese inflation hits 11 year high Times Online (19/2/08)
Questions
1. |
Explain the principal factors that have led to the increase in inflation in China. |
2. |
“Policymakers in China will likely try to tighten monetary policy further, with more reserve requirement ratio hikes, faster Chinese yuan appreciation, and more heavy handed controls over bank lending.” Discuss the likely effectiveness of these policy measures. |
3. |
Assess the extent to which changes in food prices will affect the overall level of aggregate demand in the Chinese economy. |
Price controls – limiting the price of goods through government intervention in a market – have fallen out of fashion to a great extent as an economic policy tool in the past couple of decades, but they may be making a comeback in Argentina, Russia and China according to the article below from Slate magazine.
Cry for me Argentina (and Russia and China) MSN Slate (30/10/07)
Questions
1. |
Using supply and demand diagrams as appropriate, illustrate the ways in which price controls have been used to influence prices in Argentina and Russia and China. |
2. |
Examine the reasons why the Argentinean government has chosen to implement price controls for energy. |
3. |
Discuss the likely effectiveness of price controls in combating inflation in Russia, China and Argentina. |
China, in a contentious new law, has given its people additional private property rights and protection of private assets. Many were worried that this eroded fundamental socialist principles, and it can be argued that this moves China further towards becoming a market economy.
China announces new property law BBC News Online (9/3/07)
China passes new law on property BBC News Online (16/3/07)
Questions
1. |
Examine the implications for the Chinese economy of the new additional property rights. |
2. |
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the new law giving additional private property rights. |
3. |
Assess the extent to which this moves China closer to being a free market economy. |
In a new book, Will Hutton, the editor of the Observer and well-known economic commentator, has argued that we have overstated the economic threat from China. He argues that their economic model is flawed and that extensive corruption in the system is distorting economic growth in the country. The article below from the Guardian is an edited extract from his new book that considers many of these issues.
Power, corruption and lies Guardian (8/1/07)
Questions
1. |
“….. the transition from communism remains fundamentally problematic”. Discuss the extent to which these problems are likely to affect the pace of development in China. |
2. |
Explain what Will Hutton means by ‘Leninist corporatism’. Why does he believe this to be a problem for China? |
3. |
Assess the likely impact of corruption in China on long-term development and the rate of economic growth. |