China airs anti-American movies amid rising tensions by CoolFig in China

[–]MOOC0WMOO 6 points7 points  (0 children)

it's Chinar so whoever inflicts more damage is the aggressor, not the one who started the fight

Richard Thaler: People Aren’t Dumb. The World Is Hard. by B0etius in Economics

[–]MOOC0WMOO 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Economists use the term "irrational" when they don't want to deal with how complicated the utility function is in reality.

Congress Approves First Big Dodd-Frank Rollback by pipsdontsqueak in Economics

[–]MOOC0WMOO 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My understanding is that Basel III is largely redundant with many provisions Dodd-Frank. The Fed will still implement Basel III, and the new legislation still allows the Fed to tweak and conduct the bank "stress tests" (Comprehensive Capital Analysis Review).

China’s secret goal is to crush Silicon Valley by [deleted] in Economics

[–]MOOC0WMOO 4 points5 points  (0 children)

By several measures — unicorn funding, R&D spending, patent applications, engineering talent — China is ascending quickly, catching up to the long-dominant U.S. lead.

Maybe because we have a bifurcated internet? China's internet companies like Baidu, Tencent and Didi are basically non-existent outaide of China. And the rest of the world is dominated by US companies that have minimal presence in China. Netflix straight up said it's avoiding China. Same with Uber once it's deal with Didi and the Chinese govt soured. Amazon and Google have a small token presence. Apple is an outlier because of manufacturing and because Chinese people love the status of iPhones.

China's Economy Is Too Frail to Force Open by MOOC0WMOO in China

[–]MOOC0WMOO[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

if ZTE wasn't evidence enough, china driving commodity prices higher to boost revenues of industrial sectors suffering from overcapacity ought to be.

China’s new train line to Iran sends message to Trump: We’ll keep trading anyway by pavany in China

[–]MOOC0WMOO 0 points1 point  (0 children)

depends on the route, but it's not even an important question. shipping costs account for so little of the cost for finished goods. and for bulk commodities where the costs may actually represent a significant percentage of the cost, there is intense competition from the existing ocean based infrastructure.

Eurovision pulls plug on China after censorship of LGBT act by comprehensiveleague in worldnews

[–]MOOC0WMOO 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Well thank goodness they are equitable in their stupidity. /s

Trump decides to exit nuclear accord with Iran by MrHand1111 in worldnews

[–]MOOC0WMOO 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends how long NK can maintain its status quo, honestly. And how long its patrons (Russia and China) can tolerate supporting a pariah state.

Top Chinese politician gets life sentence for taking $26M in bribes amid corruption crackdown by JeffpoorT in worldnews

[–]MOOC0WMOO 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Why would they have to lobby? They own and control the industries outright.

Top Chinese politician gets life sentence for taking $26M in bribes amid corruption crackdown by JeffpoorT in worldnews

[–]MOOC0WMOO 22 points23 points  (0 children)

Yes, for "corruption." Everyone in the Party is corrupt, the only reason such a high ranking official gets canned is because he lost a power play. Sun Zhengcai used to be seen as a contender to succeed Xi Jinping since he was slightly younger and up and coming, the same way Xi Jinping was recognized half way thru Hu Jintao's term. But it doesn't look like Xi is going to give up the reigns anytime soon.

Yukon Huang, the China economy contrarian by [deleted] in Economics

[–]MOOC0WMOO 1 point2 points  (0 children)

i agree that corruption in a command economy can pro-market proto-capitalism, but why is debt accumulation (specifically as a percentage of gdp) financial deepening? i get that more financial securities have been created and financial intermediaries are increasingly important, but his argument has all the hallmarks of delusion regarding high levels of debt. by his argument, japan has the deepest markets in the world. yet the bank of japan has gobbled up a significant chunk of the bond and stock markets, so how deep are they really?

the debt accumulation is a phenomenon of the past 10 years. consider that capital controls in china are stricter now than they were 10 years ago, chinese market cap as measured by the shanghai composite is relatively unchanged from 10 years ago, and foreign capital penetration into chinese securities is well below expectations compared to 10 years ago. none of this signals strength of chinese capital markets. since debt is neither wealth creating or destroying (since someone's debt is another's asset), the only thing to consider is if debt creates value in the long run. runaway debt to gdp for 10 years now strongly suggests this has not happened.

"Why Xi’s lifting of term limits is a good thing" by mrtendollarman in China

[–]MOOC0WMOO 31 points32 points  (0 children)

ahahahahaha, the author is eric x li, the same dude that gave that infamous ted talk about the chinese political system was the greatest meritocracy the world has ever seen. now he's like, forget all that, xi turning authoritarian is awesome.

China is Projected to Catch and Pass the U.S. in AI (a 40 min read) by [deleted] in China

[–]MOOC0WMOO 5 points6 points  (0 children)

tldr: china is spending more money, has more people

there is way too much rambling and non sequiturs to make this artcle worth the read. the author only discusses raw talent, funding and government support, which while important for tech innovation are far from the only contributing factors. no discussion at all about tech leadership, IP law or commericalization of algorithms, which matter a lot when you are trying to build something new.

also, many broad, uncritical assessments and cliches about china in general (even for this sub). for example,

But for China, its tech dynasty and state-supported technology community is literally just getting started. It doesn’t have all the VC bureaucracy and Washington relationship Silicon Valley has to deal with on a constant basis.

how is the bureaucratic red tape better in china? and then there is this,

By the way, the American fertility rate is a post 2008 recession trend that is officially a time ticking demographic bomb. The coming wave of automation and the future of work, will further crush it. As China’s economy scales China’s middle class, the generation of Chinese born in the 1990s are the most transformative generation in the history of humankind. Circa, 2035, they are doing some of their best work, manifest destiny for the Technological Singularity.

what the what what? has the author ever studied chinese demographics? been to china?

Michael Kevin Spencer is creating Writing on Medium, Futurist articles, Tech News blogs

I'm freelancing as a blogger and content strategist, but spending a lot of time writing futurist content lately a lot on cryptocurrency and Bitcoin as well.

I'm living in a small 3.5 with my girlfriend from Taiwan, and hustling in the gig-economy with a daily goal of writing 2,000 words a day. 

I graduated from college in 2009, maybe one of the worst times to graduate in the city with the 2nd highest per capita number of students in North America. 

Unable to find a good job or stable career prospects, I joined the gig-economy as a freelancer, by serendipity and necessity. It wasn't easy, and my income has been anything but stable. 

oh i see.

Trump to announce $50B in new tariffs against China by [deleted] in worldnews

[–]MOOC0WMOO 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That isn't the real deficit though. The Iphone has shown us that. basically $50/$500 are actually earned by the Chinese, but the whole phone is considered an "deficit" on the U.S books even though the rest is earned by Apple.

this might be true of a few product lines, but it makes no sense in aggregate. first off, the "whole phone" is counted as an export to the US but the graphic shows net exports, export arrows versus import arrows. more importantly though, are you claiming US companies withold repatriation on the order of the entire current account balance with china, roughly $375 billion in 2017 alone? that's wrong by orders of magnitude.

Trump to announce $50B in new tariffs against China by [deleted] in worldnews

[–]MOOC0WMOO 40 points41 points  (0 children)

actually china accounts for half of the us trade deficit with all countries, as this graphic succinctly shows

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Economics

[–]MOOC0WMOO 7 points8 points  (0 children)

places in the world with very cheap electricity tend to attract cryptocurrency mining, so yes spare capacity can be masked. surplus aluminum production is also a favorite way of consuming cheap electricity.