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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum
GLD 368.12-0.5%Oct 31 5:00 PM EST

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To: TobagoJack who wrote (126665)12/21/2016 1:08:04 AM
From: elmatador4 Recommendations

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African and islands must stop accepting projects importation.
China has a surplus of experience machinery and manpower resources to build mega infrastructures that they no longer need in China. They are dumping these in the unsophisticated cargo cult African and islands countries.

I have three decades of experience in developing countries and saw it all before when Europeans were hard at work selling projects to middle east and Africa,

Does infrastructure investment lead to economic growth or economic fragility? Evidence from China

Atif Ansar *, Bent Flyvbjerg **, Alexander Budzier *** and Daniel Lunn **** ?* Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, e-mail: atif.ansar@sbs.ox.ac.uk ?** Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, e-mail: bent.flyvbjerg@sbs.ox.ac.uk ?*** Saïd Business School, University of Oxford, e-mail: alexander.budzier@sbs.ox.ac.uk ?**** Department of Statistics, University of Oxford, e-mail: d.lunn@stats.ox.ac.uk

Abstract
China’s three-decade infrastructure investment boom shows few signs of abating. Is China’s economic growth a consequence of its purposeful investment? Is China a prodigy in delivering infrastructure from which rich democracies could learn? The prevalent view in economics literature and policies derived from it is that a high level of infrastructure investment is a precursor to economic growth. China is especially held up as a model to emulate. Politicians in rich democracies display awe and envy of the scale of infrastructure Chinese leaders are able to build. Based on the largest dataset of its kind, this paper punctures the twin myths that (i) infrastructure creates economic value, and that (ii) China has a distinct advantage in its delivery. Far from being an engine of economic growth, the typical infrastructure investment fails to deliver a positive risk-adjusted return. Moreover, China’s track record in delivering infrastructure is no better than that of rich democracies. Investing in unproductive projects results initially in a boom, as long as construction is ongoing, followed by a bust, when forecasted benefits fail to materialize and projects therefore become a drag on the economy. Where investments are debt-financed, overinvesting in unproductive projects results in the build-up of debt, monetary expansion, instability in financial markets, and economic fragility, exactly as we see in China today. We conclude that poorly managed infrastructure investments are a main explanation of surfacing economic and financial problems in China. We predict that, unless China shifts to a lower level of higher-quality infrastructure investments, the country is headed for an infrastructure-led national financial and economic crisis, which is likely also to be a crisis for the international economy. China’s infrastructure investment model is not one to follow for other countries but one to avoid.
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