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On the surface, China’s actions in stimulating its economy may look to some as a modestly positive development. However, such thinking misses the larger point.

Emerging economies are beginning to show a willingness to take the global growth lead. By seeking to generate domestic demand (which is what their stimulus package is designed to target), China is showing the way for other well- capitalized emerging economies to take control of their own economic destiny: Depend less on exports to the developed countries and their overburdened consumers and more on their own emergent middle class for growth and stability. In the process, emerging economies will be a central part to a world economic transformation that will usher in a new, more sustained era of global growth that is difficult to impossible for many to see through the current haze of the credit crisis.

It is, of course, reasonable to be skeptical that such a transformation will succeed, certainly to the extent that it replaces in large part what has been the engine of global growth – the US consumer. Moreover, the process of transformation will not be smooth. The disruptions to the world economy and financial markets have been profound. And the policy responses have been both disjointed and evolutionary. But progress is being made as evidenced by the TED spread.

Of course, in a world dominated by conventional thinking and simplifying assumptions regarding trends, it is not hard to find many doubters that the progression to a new multi-polar world order underway will result in growth and stability that far exceeds the credit juiced era just ended. Moreover, it is equally hard for many to believe that such a world will include better managed financial instruments to satisfy the emergent global appetite for financial innovation. But that is precisely where the surprise may lie.

Investment Strategy Implications

While it won’t happen overnight, the global growth handoff is underway. Coupled with a rebalanced developed economies, global growth driven by emerging economies appears to be poised to lead the way for a more sustainable and balanced era. More work needs to be done and things must go right on a whole range of levels (economic and financial). However, yesterday’s news regarding China is a big step in the right direction.

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This article has 4 comments:

  •  
    china's neighbors in se asia (asean) do not think china's stimulus will help them. no one sees china importing anything more than commodities for several decades.

    i think china becoming an economic power is a long way away.

    2008 Nov 12 12:50 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    A lot of bulls on China but I wonder how many have really bet heavily on what they say? The proof of the pudding is in the eating as the proverb goes.
    2008 Nov 12 08:06 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    China will be the biggest disappointment in the coming 3-4 years - it will go down as spectacularly as the US did in the past few months.
    2008 Nov 12 10:15 PM | Link | Reply
  •  
    I am one of those who bet on China. I short heavily on S&P and hold a lot of CAF. I will hold my short position till Dow goes to 7500. While CAF may sink with it in short term, long term I am quite confident it will give me good return.

    In the recent 5 days, S&P is down 5% while CAF is up 10%. I think the market starts to realize US has a bigger problem and worse growth outlook than China. It seemed quite obvious to me but I guess people just don't believe it.
    2008 Nov 17 07:03 PM | Link | Reply