Start Trading Now Get Started
Table of Contents
Affiliate Disclosure
Affiliate Disclosure DailyForex.com adheres to strict guidelines to preserve editorial integrity to help you make decisions with confidence. Some of the reviews and content we feature on this site are supported by affiliate partnerships from which this website may receive money. This may impact how, where and which companies / services we review and write about. Our team of experts work to continually re-evaluate the reviews and information we provide on all the top Forex / CFD brokerages featured here. Our research focuses heavily on the broker’s custody of client deposits and the breadth of its client offering. Safety is evaluated by quality and length of the broker's track record, plus the scope of regulatory standing. Major factors in determining the quality of a broker’s offer include the cost of trading, the range of instruments available to trade, and general ease of use regarding execution and market information.

World’s Second Largest Economy Slows

By Dr. Mike Campbell
Dr. Mike Campbell is a British scientist and freelance writer. Mike got his doctorate in Ghent, Belgium and has worked in Belgium, France, Monaco and Austria since leaving the UK. As a writer, he specialises in business, science, medicine and environmental subjects.

By: Dr. Mike Campbell

Adversity likes company, so there is probably some comfort for the world’s major economies to know that China is not immune from the global slowdown. But before smug smiles settle on faces in Tokyo, New York and London, the slowdown in Chinese economic output in Q3 was to a level of 9.1%. The pace of Chinese expansion has cooled by 0.4% from the previous quarter’s reading of 9.5%, but the performance is almost an order of magnitude better than most of China’s rivals.

The slowdown has been attributed to attempts to rein-in inflation which is running substantially above the target figure of 4%. The core inflation figure was 6.1% for September, but food inflation was more than twice this at 13.4%. Although China has become the economic powerhouse of the global economy, there are still major inequalities between the new Chinese entrepreneurs and the rank and file comrades of the communist state. Such tensions always have the power to lead to civil unrest and so tackling inflation is a priority for the communist state.

There is also concern that the spiralling rise in the value of certain asset groups (most notably property values) has the capacity for becoming an asset bubble which will eventually burst with strongly negative consequences (the Irish sovereign debt crisis was largely inspired by a property boom – when that crashed, the government were forced to come to the rescue of the financial sector).

A further factor which is responsible (in part at least) for a slowing of Chinese growth is the global situation. With demand at best anaemic in the rest of the world because of concerns over the sovereign debt crisis and a general lack of economic confidence, demand for Chinese goods abroad is weakening.

The EU is China’s biggest export market worth more than €380 billion a year. The Chinese do not want to see a weak Euro (or a sovereign collapse in Greece) since it will harm their competitive edge in the region.

Dr. Mike Campbell
About Dr. Mike Campbell
Dr. Mike Campbell is a British scientist and freelance writer. Mike got his doctorate in Ghent, Belgium and has worked in Belgium, France, Monaco and Austria since leaving the UK. As a writer, he specialises in business, science, medicine and environmental subjects.
 

Most Visited Forex Broker Reviews