Emerging Market Strategies

William Gamble

A Chinese Dog that will not Hunt

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This entry was posted on 9/12/2006 4:06 PM and is filed under Chinese Equity Investments.

China is apparently debating the establishment of a new "super regulator" for its finance and banking industries. Apparently it cannot countenance the real super regulators: free markets, free press, independent judiciary and an independent central bank. The reason why is simple. Free markets, free press, an independent judiciary and an independent central bank would decrease the power of the Chinese Communist Party, so they are not options.

Instead, Beijing has fallen back on its authoritarian instincts and is considering a new watchdog. It will not work. It won’t work for the same reason that its other watchdogs don’t work. In game theory an agent’s best move is to cheat the principal. So the principal appoints a watchdog. Then the agent’s best move is, of course, to suborn the watchdog.

Inflation targeting and municipal bonds also will not work for the same reason. Bureaucracies unless restrained by an independent press and judiciary will, in time, do what ever they want. Bureaucrats will give false information to the inflation targeters and will misspend bond money. They will become rent seekers. Another layer will only make things worse.

The government has not solve any problems, especially the banks. They were insolvent and state controlled before the recapitalization and IPOs. Afterwards, they are still insolvent and state controlled run by uncontrolled senior bureaucrats answerable only to themselves.

Open any edition of the Financial Times and you will see a story about some manager or bureaucrat who has done something questionable and may face prosecution. These institutions are the real watchdogs. Until they are unchanged in China, you can be sure that investors, depositors and the national purse will be pilfered.

 

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    • 12/21/2010 4:59 PM life insurance wrote:
      Hi I would like to find out how you found this template from I want it!
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    • 1/17/2011 1:19 PM Freedom IQ wrote:
      China's experience with free markets is quite limited. It stands to reason that the central authority---the Communist Party---is jealous of its prerogatives. And they will not easily let them go.
      As you point out, however, theirs is a losing strategy. As long as they follow their authoritarian and bureaucratic inclinations, they will lose ground.
      Reply to this
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