“China and India are developing countries with vast growth potential. However, amid a liquidity boom, they over-marketed their potential, and nurtured and enjoyed a bubble ride. Their governments felt lucky and hoped that they could grow out of all their problems. Of course, bubbles cover up problems for a time and make them bigger after. As the global liquidity boom unwinds, investors need a better story to stay in emerging markets. Too much money around was good enough before. Now China and India need to convince investors that they can revive growth without a global liquidity boom.”
http://english.caixin.com/2013-09-05/100578323.html
Related posts:
The Next Best Thing
A Story of Slavery in Modern America
The Link Between High Tax Rates and Corruption
Anti-gun cities, where the rich pay for protection while the poor pay with their lives
America, Flirting with the Dark Side of History
The Best Quality Of Life In The World: Residency & Citizenship In Austria
Chris Becker on South Africa, Gold and the Ludwig von Mises Institute
Free Money for Everyone
Desert Storm Anniversary Reminds Us That Even Victorious Wars Are Problematic
Indians should help Bitcoin eclipse the empires of rupee and dollar
America’s Schools Transform Into Authoritarian Instruments of Compliance
How the CIA Helped Disney Conquer Florida
Google's Trillion-Dollar Driverless Car -- Part 2: The Ripple Effects
Marc Faber on Commodity Cycles and the Wealth Redistribution Craze
Taking pills for unhappiness reinforces the idea that being sad is not human