segunda-feira, 17 de janeiro de 2011
TEc - "Mr. China goes shopping" China-Europe relations are warming up too.
That China's place in the world is rising fast is now much more than a common perception.
The country's growing political and economic prominence is highlighted by a spate of initiatives taken across many geographies.
For Europe (the EU plus Russia) it should be a good thing that an hitherto slumbering nation has awakened with gusto.
The latest frenzy by China's top officials was meticulously planned to include the softer spots of Euro Zone in their hour of need.
China is driven not only by self-interest - as always results from interaction between States - but by a considerable amount of the famous Chinese wisdom too.
The will to prop up the EuroZone so that the Euro currency may hold its ground stems from a strategic view that the world's economy must diversify away from the US dollar.
Europe and China must indeed forge ahead at every level building up from current exchanges.
However, the EU should have by now assessed in full the knock-on effect China has had on economies across member countries.
While the case for free markets is a powerful one and is unlikely to retreat, fact is attention must be paid to overall effects on individual economies.
Europe's fear is rooted in a number of factors that converged simultaneously to undermine the present.
But mainly threatening its future prosperity and well-being.
It is not so much that China's economy is (still) only one third the size of the EU's.
It is the realization that it already is one third and growing at rates hovering around of 7.5%-10%.
Should existing trends stick for another decade or two and the EU will be overtaken.
If nearly a fifth of humanity is being uplifted multifold then there's every reason to rejoice.
Enough of them that would not fit in this brief comment.
European leadership has to make up its mind as to what role they envisage for their countries/peoples in a world undergoing fast transformation.
Nothing can be achieved overnight but the European Union's political and economic project seems to me the best way forward.
For all current weaknesses there are enough strengths from within to ensure the Continent's relevancy in the future.
The sooner many more realise this - those who truly matter and are able to influence direction - the quicker structural solutions to current woes will be found.
To that end economic growth above 2.5% spread across every poorer EU country looks critical.
China's European push is as welcome as it is inevitable given that country's strong macro-fundamentals and willingness to scatter assets.
And the (very) weak ones of too many of the so-called EuroZone periphery.
The country's growing political and economic prominence is highlighted by a spate of initiatives taken across many geographies.
For Europe (the EU plus Russia) it should be a good thing that an hitherto slumbering nation has awakened with gusto.
The latest frenzy by China's top officials was meticulously planned to include the softer spots of Euro Zone in their hour of need.
China is driven not only by self-interest - as always results from interaction between States - but by a considerable amount of the famous Chinese wisdom too.
The will to prop up the EuroZone so that the Euro currency may hold its ground stems from a strategic view that the world's economy must diversify away from the US dollar.
Europe and China must indeed forge ahead at every level building up from current exchanges.
However, the EU should have by now assessed in full the knock-on effect China has had on economies across member countries.
While the case for free markets is a powerful one and is unlikely to retreat, fact is attention must be paid to overall effects on individual economies.
Europe's fear is rooted in a number of factors that converged simultaneously to undermine the present.
But mainly threatening its future prosperity and well-being.
It is not so much that China's economy is (still) only one third the size of the EU's.
It is the realization that it already is one third and growing at rates hovering around of 7.5%-10%.
Should existing trends stick for another decade or two and the EU will be overtaken.
If nearly a fifth of humanity is being uplifted multifold then there's every reason to rejoice.
Enough of them that would not fit in this brief comment.
European leadership has to make up its mind as to what role they envisage for their countries/peoples in a world undergoing fast transformation.
Nothing can be achieved overnight but the European Union's political and economic project seems to me the best way forward.
For all current weaknesses there are enough strengths from within to ensure the Continent's relevancy in the future.
The sooner many more realise this - those who truly matter and are able to influence direction - the quicker structural solutions to current woes will be found.
To that end economic growth above 2.5% spread across every poorer EU country looks critical.
China's European push is as welcome as it is inevitable given that country's strong macro-fundamentals and willingness to scatter assets.
And the (very) weak ones of too many of the so-called EuroZone periphery.
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