Page added on September 29, 2012
Both China and Russia suffer from deep, structural problems which threaten the long-term viability of their respective governmental organisations. Many of China’s problems can be symbolised by the ongoing spate of collapsing buildings, bridges, tunnels, power lines, railways, and other types of hasty construction and engineering.
Nearly every month brings news of an infrastructure failure, dramatic or mundane. In August a new $300 million eight-lane suspension bridge in Harbin collapsed, sending four trucks tumbling and leaving three dead. In 2009 a nearly completed building in Shanghai toppled like a domino because its foundation was inadequate. The U.K.’s Telegraph reported that within months of opening last year, the $210 million Guangzhou Opera House began to shed its glass window panels and developed large cracks in its ceiling. Last year writer Evan Osnos chronicled on his New Yorker blog the premature decline of his courtyard house: “When the rainy season hit Beijing, our house began to show its age. About four years old, to be precise.”
All of this is at odds with the image overseas of China winning the “infrastructure race,” as the headline of an Aug. 24 online story from Foreign Policy put it. China’s structural woes stem in part from the government’s focus on quantity of growth over quality.
…Poor materials can cause problems: The collapse of school buildings in the wake of the 2008 Wenchuan earthquake was due in part to the use of low-quality cement, resulting in so-called tofu buildings. “When cement is mixed inadequately or when other materials are mixed in, it’s not very strong, so any major storm or stress on a building could make it fall down,” says Francis Cheung, author of brokerage firm CLSA’s 2012 report, China’s Infrastructure Bubble. _BW
China’s problems go much deeper than corrupt and sloppy engineering, of course. China’s banking system is choking on bad loans to state-owned and state-connected enterprises. Every part of China’s government is tied up in the massive corruption — from the military to civil security forces to local governments to top and mid-level political officials.
Built on such a shaky foundation, China’s future as a going concern should be open to question — at least in its present iterative form.
Putin’s Russia — a neo-fascist enterprise corrupt from top to bottom — is beginning to suffer for its over-dependence on energy prices and profits:
Gazprom, the natural gas company controlled by the Russian state, is in crisis. It is likely to fall victim to the shale gas revolution that is under way across the US. The shale gas revolution will probably have telling consequences for Russian state capitalism and President Vladimir Putin’s power….
…Gazprom’s demise looks likely. With its demise, Russia’s revenues would dwindle. Mr Putin‘s model of state capitalism would suffer a devastating blow from Gazprom’s fall. If not even Gazprom is viable, which Russian state company is?…
…Curiously, in 2011 Gazprom was formally the most profitable company in the world with purported net profits of $46bn, but these profits were hardly real. Investment analysts opined that no less than $40bn disappeared through inefficiency or corruption. Gazprom’s cash flow was barely positive.
In their 2010 booklet Putin and Gazprom , Boris Nemtsov and Vladimir Milov, the opposition politicians, detailed how assets were being stripped from Gazprom through large kickbacks on pipeline construction and cheap sales of financial and media subsidiaries to Putin cronies. Since shareholders have realised that only their dividend yield is material, Gazprom’s market value has plummeted by two-thirds from $365bn in May 2008 to $120bn today.
For years, many analysts have said that Russia will reform only when the oil price falls because Gazprom seems to be the Kremlin’s main slush fund, which is now being drastically reduced. The Kremlin will have little choice but to forsake its mega-projects. It has already abandoned the mastodon Arctic Shtokman field. The next steps should be to back out of South Stream, the superfluous and exceedingly expensive pipeline project, as well as the planned gigantic sky-rise headquarters in St Petersburg. But that will hardly suffice. This dysfunctional former Soviet gas ministry will have to be cut up into real companies, which need to be privatised.
_FT
h/t The GWPF
Both China and Russia are nations of great ambition. But no matter how ambitious a government’s goals, if the foundations of its very existence are cracked and crumbling, the Potemkin Village is unlikely to remain standing long enough to bluster its way to the final goal.
6 Comments on "Deep Structural Problems Threaten China, Russia"
Arthur on Sat, 29th Sep 2012 1:10 pm
China’s main handicap is it’s overpopulation. This could force them in the future to take the flight forward and resort to war to expand their ‘Lebensraum’ in search for resources. With Russia as the first potential victim of this drive for expansion. Siberia is 10% of the planetary landmass and virtually empty and rich of resources. If Russia would resort to threaten to wipe out Chinese cities, the Chinese government might be tempted to call Russia’s bluff, and let the Russians solve the Chinese overpopulation problem, so they can be blamed. And one retalliatory strike on Moscow and Russia seizes to exist as an administrative/political entity.
DC on Sat, 29th Sep 2012 2:46 pm
Dream on Al Fin, yes, China does have these problems, but China has been around for 5000 years, the US of Plastic, 200 and change.As I read this article about neo-fascists and corrupt govt top to bottom, I could have swore he was talking about his own US-corpgov. The US is full of equally shoddy buildings and subs-standard infastructure. That sort of thing is rarely headline news though, either in China or the US. Even more ironic, most of the stuff buildings are being put togther with in N.A. is made in….guess where!
Yea China.
LoL again@ Al Fin
dsula on Sat, 29th Sep 2012 3:16 pm
DC you just can’t take any negative news about anybody else than the US, can you? Everybody else is perfect, just the US is evil to the core. The only thing missing in your comment is explaining how a collapsing building in china is in fact the fault of some evil US corporation or governemnt or a truck driving farmer in the midwest.
Man, you’re such a douchbag.
Beery on Sat, 29th Sep 2012 10:15 pm
“Both China and Russia suffer from deep, structural problems which threaten the long-term viability of their respective governmental organisations.”
Big deal! So does everyone else. It’s called Peak Oil.
Sharpie on Sat, 29th Sep 2012 10:51 pm
Guess that’s the price to pay for blistering 10% economic growth rates. Gotta have that growth.
Copainization on Sat, 1st Jul 2017 9:02 pm
Actually the farmers can be thought of as a supportive force in the battle for California 2018.
Georgia farmers have all the neato gearing.