El turismo chino en 2013: 100  millones de turistas salieron de China al resto del mundo. La mayoría, más del  60% fueron a destinos asiáticos, por su proximidad. Sólo el 5%  fue a Europa. España recibió casi 180.000 turistas chinos en 2013; París  fue visitado por 700.000 turistas chinos el año pasado…¿No habría que hacer  algo para pillar a más chinorris? Seguro que sí, seguro que ya lo estamos  haciendo y tal…
¿Por qué no fomentamos los lazos  comerciales entre China y España? Somos los grandes perdedores ya que los  acuerdos de intercambio comercial que no hagas tu, los hacen con nuestra  competencia, con Francia y con Alemania…
La diferencia entre nuestros  mandatarios y los de otros países es que estos últimos salen al extranjero a  vender su país. El Presidente Chino ha estado en Francia para tratar de  equilibrar la balanza comercial gala con China que era muy deficitaria. (President Xi trip to France leaves €18.000 M in commercial  contracts). Se llegan a compromisos, a acuerdos de intercambio… Obama se  va de gira continuamente, no sólo por placer, sino para vender su país, para  llegar a acuerdos comerciales… 
También ha estado el Presidente  chino en Alemania. Y ha publicado esto de sus buenas relaciones comerciales con  los germanos: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/world/2014xivisiteu/2014-03/28/content_17387815.htm  
In recent years, the China-Germany cooperation has led the  China-EU cooperation. Each day, the trade in goods between China and Germany  accounts for about 1/3 of that between China and the EU which totals US$1.5  billion. Every week, there are over 70 flights connecting more than 10 cities of  our two countries. Among the three rail links that have been built between  China and Europe, two stretch to Duisburg and Hamburg of Germany respectively.  Every year, there are one million tourists traveling between China and Germany.  China and Germany have become each other's largest trading partner in Asia and  Europe respectively. Furthermore, enterprises of our two countries have made  the other country their most important investment destination. Up till now, more than 8,200 German companies  and over 2,000 Chinese enterprises have established themselves in each other's  country. Our two countries have over 60 dialogue and cooperation mechanisms,  including the governmental consultations, strategic dialogue and rule of law  dialogue, which have been operating smoothly and have provided a forceful  guarantee for continuous progress in China-Germany relations. Our two countries  have also increasingly closely coordinated and cooperated with each other in  major international issues, such as world peace, regional security, climate  change, food security and sustainable development.
 destination. Up till now, more than 8,200 German companies  and over 2,000 Chinese enterprises have established themselves in each other's  country. Our two countries have over 60 dialogue and cooperation mechanisms,  including the governmental consultations, strategic dialogue and rule of law  dialogue, which have been operating smoothly and have provided a forceful  guarantee for continuous progress in China-Germany relations. Our two countries  have also increasingly closely coordinated and cooperated with each other in  major international issues, such as world peace, regional security, climate  change, food security and sustainable development.
 destination. Up till now, more than 8,200 German companies  and over 2,000 Chinese enterprises have established themselves in each other's  country. Our two countries have over 60 dialogue and cooperation mechanisms,  including the governmental consultations, strategic dialogue and rule of law  dialogue, which have been operating smoothly and have provided a forceful  guarantee for continuous progress in China-Germany relations. Our two countries  have also increasingly closely coordinated and cooperated with each other in  major international issues, such as world peace, regional security, climate  change, food security and sustainable development.
 destination. Up till now, more than 8,200 German companies  and over 2,000 Chinese enterprises have established themselves in each other's  country. Our two countries have over 60 dialogue and cooperation mechanisms,  including the governmental consultations, strategic dialogue and rule of law  dialogue, which have been operating smoothly and have provided a forceful  guarantee for continuous progress in China-Germany relations. Our two countries  have also increasingly closely coordinated and cooperated with each other in  major international issues, such as world peace, regional security, climate  change, food security and sustainable development.
A new round of scientific and industrial revolution is just around  the corner and countries around the world are trying to adjust or adapt  themselves to the development and lose no time in introducing necessary reform  measures. Against this backdrop, China has decided to follow the trend of the  times, deepen reform comprehensively, and seize the historical opportunity to  realize the modernization of the country and the renewal of the nation.
Además, se  está construyendo una línea de ferrocarril que une China con Alemania que  permitirá el transporte de mercancías entre ambos países.
En España ni lo olemos. Por  supuesto que Xi no ha venido a vernos, ¿para qué? Nosotros tenemos a un rey muy  mayor que no se mueve, a un heredero que no le dan tanto carrete y a unos  presidentes de gobiernos vagos, que no saben de idiomas ni tienen ese don de  gentes, ni espíritu comercial alguno, y que delegan en crear una cosa llamada "marca  España" para que unos subordinados hagan lo que deberían hacer ellos… Y  esto no funciona tan bien. Ser gobernante implica muchos sacrificios, muchos  viajes comerciales…, todos estamos siempre vendiendo algo y ellos representan a  España como empresa… No sé si ellos, todavía no se han coscado, o prefieren  mandar al Margallo y a Carlos Espinosa y cual…
Los gobernantes españoles se  dedican a legislar memeces, leyes y más leyes… Es como si en una empresa el  director general se dedicara a establecer continuamente normas de funcionamiento,  en vez de impulsar el negocio, de hacer actividad comercial. Por culpa de tener  17 reinos de Taifas dentro, se pierde el tiempo atendiendo a los reyezuelos de  turno, reuniones y más reuniones, en vez de diseñar un cambio del modelo de crecimiento,  o en apoyar a las exportadoras, o impulsar el turismo, nuestro principal  negocio, del que nada hacen…
Y sigo indignado porque no ven  más allá de un palmo de sus narices. Me cabrea que nos hayamos gastado 65  millones de euros en reformar el Museo Antropológico de Madrid (10.800 millones  de las antiguas pesetas). Es un dinero que no tenemos y que no nos podemos  permitir, sobre todo con una tasa de paro del 26% y con una crisis de pobreza  infantil y energética de aúpa. Sí, ya sé que lo empezó el memo de Zapatero,  pero coges y lo paralizas coño, que llevas dos años y medio gobernando, joder!  ¿Cuántas más mierdas nos quedan por descubrir? Ese despilfarro de  polideportivos, pabellones, obras de Calatrava, autopistas, AVEs (el de Galicia  no tienen huevos de pararlo), puentes, M30s (las hay en casi todas las  ciudades)… y demás zarandanjas que nos han dejado sin un duro en los bolsillos  y con unas deudas que pasaran decenios, muchos, antes de que se puedan pagar…  Indignado, cabreado y jodido por mis hijos… Eso sí, a las constructoras se les  quita el peso de las radiales y autopistas quebradas, faltaría plus…  Constructores y banqueros, qué gente más simpática madre.
No te menciono a Montoro que le  viernes nos deleitó con mentiras y más mentiras. Como sabes, no me creo el dato  del PIB que considero amañado. Ahora te aseguro que tampoco puedo creerme el  dato del 6,62% del déficit público que se publicó el viernes. Si el objetivo  era del 4,5% y te lo ampliaron al 6,5%, coño cúmplelo. Según dice, se ha pasado  por decimillas, pero parece ser que lo que ha habido es una parálisis de la  contabilidad de los gastos públicos desde final de noviembre. Es como si  diciembre no hubiera existido, todo se ha pasado a enero… Ay madre. Y este año  el objetico es más ambicioso si cabe. ¿Qué haremos, lo pasamos a 2015 como el  año pasado? ¡Son unos jetas impresentables! Eurostat se lo va a corregir el  24/4 y les va a sacar los colores. Lo peor, su contento por hacer las cosas tan  bien, por hacer tanta austeridad y tal… Es que me descojono o me pongo a  llorar. Juegan con la ignorancia del pueblo y con que repetir mentiras y más  mentiras sistemáticamente en la prensa se convierten en verdades, y esto no es  así, siguen siendo mentiras y se distorsiona la realidad a peor.
Los guiris lo  leen:
Spain's budget deficit fell from 6.84% of GDP in 2012 to 6.62%  of GDP last year. The budget goal was far less ambitious than previous, but  still did not met the commitment to Brussels. The Government has published  today the first official public deficit figure for the end of 2013, there will  be new reviews in the coming months and a year, but Spain has deviated from the  intended target.
Specifically, the government recorded a hole of 6.62% of GDP in  2013 (67.755 billion euros), one tenth of a percentage point above the limit of  6.5% agreed with the European Commission, according to Finance Minister  Cristobal Montoro, in a press conference after the Council of Ministers.  However, the announced figure does not include the cost of financial aid  reported last year (0.46%), so that the actual deficit stood at 7.08% of GDP.
So Much Pain for Virtually No Reward: Happy and content as a lark, Montoro proudly announcing that  Spain "almost" met the deficit target. The Spanish public deficit  closed at 6.62% of GDP in 2013, slightly more than a tenth above the target of  6.5% agreed with the European Commission (well the first we agreed if I  remember correctly was 4.5%) 
Un desesperado abrazo,
Cosas interesantes de esta  presentación:
Infraestructuras:
Entradas y salidas de dinero:
Creando una clase media:
PD2: Desde el Financial Times  habla el prestigioso Martin Wolf sobre China que creo es muy interesante:
China's struggle for a new economy
Beijing  clearly recognises the need for action –the question is whether corrective  forces overwhelm its efforts
What are the prospects for the Chinese economy? Few, if any, economic  questions can be more important. I have just attended this year's China  Development Forum in Beijing, which brings western business leaders and  scholars together with senior Chinese policy makers and academics, with this  question very much in my mind.
Outside China, pessimism has  been growing about the ability of the colossus to sustain its rapid growth.  Worriers are paying particular attention to excessive capacity, investment and  debt. I share the view that making the transition to slower and more balanced  growth is an extraordinarily hard challenge even by the standards of those  China has already met. Yet betting against the success of Chinese policy makers  has been a foolish wager. When a superb horse meets a new obstacle, the odds  must be on the horse. But even the best horse may fall.
Yang Weimin, a vice-minister in the government, laid out the  country's new "guidelines for comprehensively deepening reform" in an  invaluable background paper. This notes several new conditions.
First, China is an upper-middle-income country, with gross  domestic product per head of $6,700. It is now tackling the rarely achieved  task of becoming an advanced economy.
Second, the international environment is less favourable than it  used to be, partly because the high-income economies are so structurally weak  and partly because the Chinese economy has become so much larger relative to  all others.
Third, the economy has itself changed. The potential growth rate  has fallen to 7-8 per cent, partly because of a shrinking labour force; excess  capacity has become massive even by Chinese standards; financial risks have risen, driven by  excessive local authority borrowing, housing bubbles and growth of shadow  banking; the country is now more than 50 per cent urbanised but its cities  suffer a range of ills, including pollution. Finally, the resource-intensive  growth pattern is hitting limits, notably of water, which is not a directly  tradeable commodity.
The "Decision on Major Issues Concerning Comprehensively Deepening  Reforms" agreed last November is the response. It is the blueprint for the  next round of reforms. It proposes, notably, substantial institutional and  political reform, including a transformation of "imperative and administrative  governance" to "governance by law". The market is to play a "decisive" role in  resource allocation. The government is, in turn, to be responsible for  "macroeconomic regulation, market regulation, public service, social  administration and environmental protection". Westerners would recognise all  that.
This implies changes in the role of state-owned enterprises. It  also implies a shift from positive to negative lists of what new entrants are  allowed to do: instead of needing approvals, businesses should be able to do  whatever is not prohibited. This might prove revolutionary. Also important are  proposed changes to the system of residence permits, which should allow 100m  migrants to become permanent urban residents.
To most outsiders the language of official declarations is  mind-numbing. Yet, having listened to Premier Li Keqiang and vice-premier Zhang  Gaoli, I found all this at least analytically convincing. They clearly recognise  the need for decisive action in response to the challenges faced. What they  want to do also makes good sense both on economic and environmental fronts.
A background paper on medium-term economic prospects and a  presentation by Stephen Roach, now at Yale, show that China has also made real  progress in its transition towards a slower, less resource-intensive and more  employment-intensive pattern of economic growth. While the services sector has  a significantly smaller share in GDP than in almost all other economies, for  the first time it became bigger than industry's in 2013. Before 2008, a  percentage point of growth produced fewer than 1m new urban jobs. Since then  each point has produced an average of 1.4m jobs. Inflation has remained well  under control and industrial profitability has held up despite slower growth.
In all, the economy seems to have been adjusting quite smoothly to  the inevitable slowdown driven by a declining ability to exploit untapped  resources, including labour.
Yet China also has a highly unbalanced economy whose most striking  feature is the extraordinarily low share of consumption, public and private,  and extraordinarily high share of investment (both close to half of GDP). Until  last year, in which there was a small reversal, the rise in the investment  share had been rapid and almost continuous since the start of the present  century.
At present, private consumption is about 35 per cent of GDP,  roughly half the share in the US. The extraordinary share of investment has  driven growth. But it is also directly related to the growth of excess capacity  and the rise in leverage. As the paper on medium-term prospects notes, the  outstanding risks to economic performance do indeed lie in the related risks of  financial panic, imploding property bubbles, high local government debt and  excess capacity. The peril is that a rapid correction would cause a positive  feedback loop and so a far sharper than expected economic slowdown.
In many important industries, output is already below 75 per cent  of capacity. Yet China is far too large to export its way out of this. In the  case of steel, for example, its annual capacity is 1bn tons and output 720m, 46  per cent of the global total. A significant slowdown in infrastructure and  property investment would devastate capacity utilisation in steel. The same is  true for cement. Bad debt would soar.
The big question now is whether the corrective forces in the  economy could overwhelm the ability of the authorities to manage the needed  adjustments smoothly.
Some might argue that a crash is precisely what is needed. The  authorities will disagree and so, which matters not at all, do I. They also  have many levers under their control. Nonetheless, the downside risks from  financial stress and macroeconomic adjustment have been rising sharply. I plan  to assess the scale of the risks and possible responses next week.
PD3: China se suma al carro de  los parques de atracciones. Por ahora gana a nivel mundial DISNEY, que sigue  con un tirón descomunal y con cifras exuberantes…, pero ya verás como los  chinos quieren potenciar su turismo interno construyendo lo mismo que tienen  los demás países.
Lo raro es que España no sale.  Recuerdas los fiascos que nos costaron una millonada: Time Warner en Madrid…, y  los demás. Perdimos nuestra oportunidad con Eurodisney, que se lo llevaron los  gabachos…
PD4: China tiene muchas reservas  y es muy fuerte económicamente hablando
Today's breathless China headline: "Chinese Yuan's Drop Is Largest Since Its 2005 Currency  Revaluation."  Yesterday's headline was even more breathless: "China Currency Plunges Most In Over 5 Years, Biggest  Weekly Loss Ever." Reading  these headlines, you'd be tempted to think that China was in trouble, but you'd  be very wrong.
Here's the "plunge" in the value of the yuan from a  big-picture perspective:
That's right, you can barely see the "plunge" when  you look at  a long-term history of the yuan. Since its all-time high of  6.04 in mid-January, it has dropped a mere 1.7%, to 6.1415. The big story in  China continues to be the yuan's impressive strength, not its weakness: it's up  42% vis a vis the dollar in the past 20 years.
And it's not just the yuan appreciating against the dollar.  It has appreciated against every currency in the world, and in  inflation-adjusted terms as well. As the chart above shows, the real value of  the yuan against a large basket of currencies has appreciated by a staggering  85% in the past 20 years. Only the yen has a better record of long-term  appreciation: it rose 250% against the dollar from 1970 through 1994 (from 350  yen per dollar to 100).
Spectacular gains in Chinese productivity—which have boosted  the size of China's economy by 8-10% per year for the past 20 years—are the main  reason the yuan has appreciated. Capital has poured into China, eager to  finance and profit from China's impressive progress.
To accommodate the huge increase in the size of China's  economy, the Chinese central bank had to expand the Chinese money supply by  orders of magnitude. They did this in a very prudent fashion, by buying almost  $4 trillion of the capital inflows that China has received over the years.  These purchases provided a solid foundation (in the form of an expansion of  China's foreign reserves—see chart above) for a necessary expansion of the amount  yuan in circulation. (Think of the growth of China's foreign exchange reserves  as a proxy for net capital inflows.) Yet even though it bought trillions of  dollars with newly-created yuan, the central bank allowed the yuan to  appreciate. In a sense, they didn't buy enough dollars and euros, and that  created an effective shortage of yuan which could only be resolved via a yuan  appreciation.
But as the chart above also shows, China's accumulation of  reserves has slowed down significantly over the past few years. That's because  the central bank has liberalized capital flows, and the strong appreciation of  the yuan has brought China's costs more into line with costs overseas, with the  result that the economy has cooled off. With capital inflows "tapering"  off, there is much less pressure for the yuan to appreciate. The central bank  is correct in allowing (and even encouraging) the yuan to trade more freely.  The yuan was on a one-way street (appreciating) for the past 8-9 years, and  that can't go on forever. Looking ahead, it's likely that the yuan will bounce  around in a relatively stable channel, rather than constantly appreciating.  This new perception alone could help reduce capital inflows and avoid any  unnecessary or unwarranted "overheating" of the economy.
For the past 15 years or so, Chinese inflation has been very  similar to U.S. inflation, as the chart above shows. But since the yuan  appreciated against the dollar by about 37% over this same period, Chinese  prices effectively rose by roughly that amount relative to U.S. prices. This  has made China somewhat less competitive, and that has worked to slow its  growth on the margin. But it's still growing by at least 7% a year. And the  central bank still has almost $4 trillion of reserves, which makes the yuan  potentially the most rock-solid currency on the planet. What's not to like  about a growing economy and a strong currency and low inflation?
PD5: Las valoraciones de los  mercados emergentes en bolsa están muy atractivas, aunque no hay flujo de  fuera hacia ahí… ¿Llegará ese flujo este año? ¿Ha empezado ya? Puede…
PD6: Esperanza no es tener  confianza en el día de mañana, si no que es confiar en que Dios, HOY, nos  provee y nos mima. No debemos estar siempre inquietos por el día de mañana…  Como decía Víctor Hugo: "¡Oh! ¡Mañana es la gran cosa! ¿De qué estará hecho el  mañana?". Pues no es eso, es el hoy lo más importante. Cumplir con el deber de  hoy y no estar pendiente del mañana. ¡Qué bueno es Dios que nos tiene escondido  el porvenir! Dios nos dará nuevas fuerzas para las dificultades del mañana. No  podemos dejar todo amarrado para el mañana, ya que siempre habrá algo  imprevisto… Hay que confiar en la providencia de Dios y no obsesionarnos con  que lo hacemos todo con nuestras fuerzas, si no que es Dios quien actúa…













 
 










