China’s leaders are “bizarrely unwilling” to use more government spending to support consumer demand instead of production, according to Nobel laureate in economics Paul Krugman.

“The fact that we seem to have a complete lack of realism on the part of the Chinese is a threat to all of us,”

Krugman echoed criticism by U.S. economic officials including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen that China can’t simply export its way out of trouble. The comments come amid renewed concern in the U.S. and Europe over what is viewed as Chinese overproduction and the dumping of heavily subsidized products overseas

China’s whole economic model is not sustainable because of “vastly inadequate” domestic spending and a lack of investment opportunities, he added. Beijing should be supporting demand not more production, he said.

  • EmmaGoldman [she/her, comrade/them]M
    ·
    25 days ago

    It's not about competition to domestic alternative energy. It's about competition to fossil fuels.

    The fear of affordable Chinese alternative energy syatems is of course the fear of petroleum losing dominance, and thus the loss of power that the petrodollar gives the US, the loss of economic power the US has as the largest exporter of refined petroleum, and the power that petroleum dependence gives the US over the daily lives of billions of people.

    US imperialism is tied deeply with the western-dominated petroleum industry and the ongoing gradual downfall of its dominance is directly tied to the ongoing downfall of the US.