“If it comes off, Tianjin’s Manhattan project will become the latest illustration of China’s build-it-and-they-will-come approach to development. Pudong -the futuristic financial center that sprang up on Shanghai’s east bank in the 1990s – also had its doubters. Occupancy rates in its central Lujiazui area are 97 per cent and rents among the world’s priciest. Tianjin’s government this month sold 13.2 billion yuan ($2.74 billion) in bonds at zero premium to central government debt, joining other provinces in taking advantage of a debt swap program designed by Beijing to keep infrastructure projects afloat. The funding fix sustains a cycle China can’t afford to break.”
Related posts:
Population trends cloud Europe's post-recession outlook
Feds firm on gun denials for pot users
New German hate speech law tested as Twitter blocks satire account
Spanish savers move money to Switzerland
Australian public programming questions value of reading to children
Whirlpool profits strangled by the tariffs it once supported
Fatal shooting of double amputee sparks call for Houston police reforms
Senator: Contractor that vetted Snowden is under investigation
On 'Intellectual Property' and Pot
Sheriff defies NY Safe Act; will not release pistol permit holders' names
6-year-old Colorado girl in national spotlight over medical marijuana
Mandarin Chinese Becomes New Language in the Classroom
Michigan governor appoints technocrat to run Detroit
India’s Tiny Declaration of Independence?
Capt. Joseph Hitner Of LAPD Removed In Probe Of Michelle Jordan's Rough Arrest