Who is Online

We have 23 guests and no members online

Economy

 

Many Chinese people are now quite wealthy and there are many German cars as well as locally manufactured and Japanese cars.  There are still quite a number of locally fabricated electric rickshaws and delivery vehicles.  The motors are obviously mass produced on a large scale. 

I saw one being serviced in our street.  They are a pancake design with a permanent magnet outer rotor and there is one at the hub of each driven wheel.  The batteries are recharged from the grid and seem to give quite a good range.  They are quiet and efficient with no exhaust; but I doubt that they have the same hill climbing ability as the Tuk Tuks used in India or Indochina.

Education is clearly very important; possibly as an outcome of the ‘one child policy’.  For part of out time in Beijing we stayed in a Houtong (renovated traditional dwelling).  We were surrounded in adjacent streets by schools and a University.  In the playground at the local primary school there seemed to be a lot of chanting and organized exercise.  But during breaks they run and scream like children everywhere.  The children are very neatly turned out in their uniforms and delivered to the door by bus or car.

At the time of our visit the local newspapers were very concerned about the state of the US economy.  China has very significant overseas reserves invested in the United States and they were concerned that policies like ‘quantitative easing’ would erode the value of the American dollar and degrade their investment in general.  China is not a free country and most of the commentary in the newspapers can be interpreted as an official view.

To support their development several developing and developed countries keep their currency well below its underlying market value. While this denies their citizens lower cost imports and some luxuries, it makes their exports more competitive internationally and local manufacturing more profitable.  It also results in an accumulation of foreign currency reserves that are effectively accessible by others, through the banking system, as loans for investment.

Developing countries often apply this mechanism as the higher work for less real income imposed on a domestic labour force can be hidden in (and is justified by) an environment of rapidly improving living standards.  China is the prime example in the World today.  As a result there is an ongoing exchange between the US and China as to how long this can go on;  with China now challenging Japan as the principle source of US foreign investment; and the Chinese remarking unfavourably on the current US deficit and fiscal policies.

 

No comments

Travel

Spain and Portugal

 

 

Spain is in the news.

Spain has now become the fourth Eurozone country, after Greece, Ireland and Portugal, to get bailout funds in the growing crisis gripping the Euro.

Unemployment is high and services are being cut to reduce debt and bring budgets into balance.  Some economists doubt this is possible within the context of a single currency shared with Germany and France. There have been violent but futile street demonstrations.

Read more: Spain and Portugal

Fiction, Recollections & News

Skydiving

 

 

On the morning of May1st 2016 I jumped, or rather slid, out of a plane over Wollongong at 14,000 feet.

It was a tandem jump, meaning that I had an instructor strapped to my back.

 


Striding Confidently Before Going Up

 

At that height the curvature of the earth is quite evident.  There was an air-show underway at the airport we took off from and we were soon looking down on the planes of the RAAF  Roulette aerobatic display team.  They looked like little model aircraft flying in perfect formation.  

Read more: Skydiving

Opinions and Philosophy

World Population – again and again

 

 

David Attenborough hit the headlines yet again in 15 May 2009 with an opinion piece in New Scientist. This is a quotation:

 

‘He has become a patron of the Optimum Population Trust, a think tank on population growth and environment with a scary website showing the global population as it grows. "For the past 20 years I've never had any doubt that the source of the Earth's ills is overpopulation. I can't go on saying this sort of thing and then fail to put my head above the parapet."

 

There are nearly three times as many people on the planet as when Attenborough started making television programmes in the 1950s - a fact that has convinced him that if we don't find a solution to our population problems, nature will:
"Other horrible factors will come along and fix it, like mass starvation."

 

Bob Hawke said something similar on the program Elders with Andrew Denton:

 

Read more: World Population – again and again

Terms of Use

Terms of Use                                                                    Copyright