• switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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      4 hours ago

      it occurs when it’s economically more efficient to move industry out of your country than to keep it in

      unless you’re suggesting china will willingly run the bulk of its industry with decreasing efficiency over time for the sake of keeping lower paying jobs domestically

      These developments look increasingly structural. The authorities’ stance since 2020, including regulatory tightening and zero-COVID lockdowns, appear to have inflicted long-lasting damage to China’s private economy, the dynamism of which was a defining feature of its economic miracle in the past four decades. Nearly 20 months into China’s COVID reopening, the private sector has yet to bounce back, despite many pro-private business utterances and gestures from China’s leadership.

      i’m not sure private businesses failing over covid is a good thing for an economy

      • TheOubliette
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        59 minutes ago

        it occurs when it’s economically more efficient to move industry out of your country than to keep it in

        It is not, generally speaking, more economically efficient to deindustrialize your own country. The logic you are using is neoliberal with “efficiency” meaning, “maximize profit for the financial sector”. This is an arrangement planned due to US-based economic crises and should not be projected onto China like some iron law. The US, as the global seat of capital, is uniquely harmful.

        i’m not sure private businesses failing over covid is a good thing for an economy

        The thing they wanted you to see were the statistics, not the guesswork and editorialization from that article.

        • switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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          5 minutes ago

          It is not, generally speaking, more economically efficient to deindustrialize your own country

          china is literally taking money that they could invest in domestic industry and investing it in industry overseas

          i guess now you get to explain why they’re doing that if some form of economic efficiency isn’t the answer

          The thing they wanted you to see were the statistics, not the guesswork and editorialization from that article.

          “don’t look at that bit of the source i just chose to show you” is an astounding bit of mental gymnastics

      • DeathsEmbrace@lemm.ee
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        4 hours ago

        I disagree with your last point. A lot of companies should have sunk in covid and been consumed by more prepared ones. The governments didn’t want it to happen and they proved we actually live in a social net capitalist economy. This way if rich people accidentally lose we can remember socialism exists for them alone.

        • switchboard_pete@fedia.io
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          3 hours ago

          A lot of companies should have sunk in covid and been consumed by more prepared ones.

          either way, mass company failure due to covid doesn’t imply anything about the split of china’s economy going forward