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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (173634)6/24/2021 8:55:56 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217825
 
the 'time' banking thing in China is just fiat money inflation, but in coupon form, and the coupons can only be used for one purpose, elder-care

perhaps all kids upon birth, to encourage more birthing, can be given education coupons (perhaps in the form of crypto-tokens that be tagged to fingerprints) that can only be used for childcare and education at state-owned facilities unless reprogrammed from time to time to be useable at private facilities based on state dispensation

blockchain and social engineering has a great big future to enable goodness, like masks and such, for the greater good



To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (173634)6/24/2021 9:19:53 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217825
 
on longterm planning, it is heart-warming to see how parents try to do better for their kids, way before they are born

I had purchased two sets of Chinese language classic books of the usual more than a decade before the Coconut came along, and never even thought about having a Jack. One set in comic strip form, and the other the formal text form.

Journey to the West en.wikipedia.org

Water Margin en.wikipedia.org

Romance of the Three Kingdoms en.wikipedia.org

Art of War en.wikipedia.org

Yue Fei biography en.wikipedia.org

Spring & Autumn Annals en.wikipedia.org

Annals of Warring States gutenberg.cc

Dream of the Red Chamber (when the kids are much older, near adult) en.wikipedia.org

Planning is not just a word, and sacrifice is not only a concept.

Love location-location-location discipline.

bloomberg.com

Why Anxious Parents Are Driving a Home Price Surge in China

24 June 2021, 21:45 GMT+8
Sign up for Next China, a weekly email on where the nation stands now and where it's going next.

How do you get into a good public school in China? Start with $1 million, spend years preparing and get lucky.

A few months ago, Wang Xuetao bought an apartment so run down its concrete walls were crumbling. If all goes right, Wang’s bet will ensure her offspring enroll in one of Beijing’s most sought-after public schools, a path to staying in the middle class. It means seven years living in a 71-square-meter (764-square-foot) apartment built in the 1960s around the time of Mao Zedong’s great famine.

With that lined up, her next step is to get pregnant.



Wang Xuetao in her apartment undergoing renovation in Beijing.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

“The location of this apartment can help my child secure a good elementary school,” said Wang, who spent about $800,000 on the apartment. “The planning takes years because I’m not someone who can easily come up with that kind of money.”

Wang is part of a trend sending home prices soaring in pockets across China and alarming the officials, now weighing how to intervene. While U.S. families have spent the pandemic fleeing cities and spreading out in suburban houses, their Chinese counterparts are racing to bid up densely packed flats near good public schools.

In the U.S., property near good public schools command higher prices, but parents can chose to rent to secure a slot. In China, many districts now require people to own the homes years in advance -- for example, in the Xicheng area where Wang lives, it’s at least six years.

China’s scale means the frenzy of potential bidders is vast: About 18 million students enroll in the public primary school system every year, and only about a fifth of them make it into university.

To ensure their children can have access to better schools -- often concentrated in big cities such as Beijing and Shanghai -- people like Wang have sent prices in the metropolises soaring. Next to Zhongguancun No. 3 Primary School, one of the city’s top five, Fengniao Residential Compound saw prices jump 31% from a year earlier, real estate platform Anjuke data shows.

In Beijing’s Yuetan area -- close to another top school -- parents typically buy an apartment 58% more expensive than their older one, but get 30% less space, according to KE Holdings Inc.

Both cities rank among the most expensive of 80 global mega-cities, according to real estate services company E-House (China) Enterprise Holdings Ltd.

The situation is especially dire in Shanghai. Prices for housing in the city’s popular school districts spiked by 20% on average in the year through March, according to local property data provider Urban Surveyors.

The asking price of a two-bedroom apartment in the city can easily reach $3.6 million, almost double the median value of U.K.’s least affordable property markets in Kensington and Chelsea, according to local agents.

School-district housing “has become a hard currency,” said Chen Sheng, president of the China Real Estate Data Academy. “There’s both real demand and it makes sense as an investment.”



Wang’s neighborhood in Beijing.

Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

Policy Tightening
Wang’s desperation is so widely shared among China’s growing middle class that the government is pushing out a vast array of policies to rein in prices. Measures range from requirements that people hold a local residency permit to paying personal income tax for a minimum five years to qualify as a buyer. Now, authorities are warning parents that proximity won’t guarantee a spot for their children.

Even President Xi Jinping has weighed in, noting during China’s annual legislative congress in March that property prices near good schools are out of whack and vowing to tackle inequality in education.

“This goes far beyond property curbs. It’s also about education reform,” said Chen Jie, a professor specializing in property research at Shanghai Jiao Tong University. “It’s an experiment to equalize opportunities for kids from different social economic backgrounds.”

Huge Enrollment Change
Chinese cities rolled out measures after the president voiced concerns on elevated home prices near popular schools

Source: Government statements

The new policies are creating an additional layer of trouble for parents like Molly Zhu. She swapped her large Shanghai apartment for a smaller, million-dollar fixer-upper for her 3-year-old son. Yet two months later, the new unit’s valuation was hit due to new rules suggesting that property ownership wouldn’t guarantee enrollment in schools.

“This is the first time where my life is more dramatic than a TV show,” said Zhu, who quit her job as a civil servant and became a import and exports trader to pay back her mortgages. “It seems like I live in a world with never-ending policy changes.”

Delicate Balance
Her plight shows the delicate balance the government needs to maintain. Authorities are trying to moderate property prices without triggering a collapse that could also lead to a public backlash. A lack of investment options means Chinese families have around 78% of their wealth tied up in property, more than double that of the U.S., according to a 2019 study by Chengdu’s Southwestern University of Finance and Economics.

For now Wang is sticking to her plans and will use her experience as an interior designer to transform her decades-old residence.

“For weeks we kept swiping property listing apps non-stop, joking we almost went blind, and suddenly this one turned up,” Wang said. “We really picked a hidden gem.”

— With assistance by Allen K Wan, Emma Dong, and Pratish Narayanan

(Updates with details about ownership rules and home price increases)

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To: Cogito Ergo Sum who wrote (173634)6/25/2021 8:43:24 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217825
 
continuing on watch & brief re imperatives leading to solutions

and the supposed issue of china running out of workers :0)

am guessing that an astute calibration of inflation might encourage folks to work longer, more diligently, for the greater good?

drum roll ... digitally programmable money that dilutes at different rate for different age?

hedging - getmoregoldfaster, because gold cannot be programmed beyond a certain delimit?

all very exciting

economist.com

At 54, China’s average retirement age is too low
The government’s efforts to raise it face stiff opposition

Jun 24th 2021
AT ABOUT 54, the average age of retirement in China is among the lowest in the world. This is a problem. Since standards were set, life expectancy has soared while the number of working adults—those whose labour, in effect, supports retirees—has begun to shrink. But persuading people that they should work longer is proving hard. In 2008 the government said it was mulling the idea of raising retirement ages, but backed away amid a public outcry. Now it feels it can wait no longer.

The pressure to act is evident. Current retirement ages were set in the 1950s, when the average person was expected to die before reaching that stage. For most men in China the age is 60, much lower than the average of 64.2 in the OECD, a club mostly of rich countries. For female civil servants the age is 55; for blue-collar women it is 50.

Yet life expectancy in China is now just two years short of the OECD average of 79, so a Chinese retiree on a state pension usually needs several more years of support from government funds than his or her rich-world equivalent. In 2019 the public-pension system covered almost 1bn adults, more than any other such scheme in the world. The country’s main pension fund may run out of money by 2035, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, an official think-tank, has warned.

The government appears not yet to have decided how to reform the system. The current five-year economic plan, a 142-page document that was approved in March, contains merely a sentence on the topic, calling for adjustment in “small steps” and “flexible implementation”. But its inclusion means that changes are all but certain to begin before the plan expires in 2025: the government rarely announces a goal that may not be attainable.

Officials say retirement ages will be lifted in stages, a few months at a time. China’s main state-run news agency, Xinhua, said two possible approaches were being considered. One would raise the retirement age for both men and women to 65, with the age for women being raised faster so that both reach the end point simultaneously. The other method would involve first raising the retirement age for women to 60, and then both sexes advancing to 65 at the same pace.

Since the government revealed that the five-year plan would call for older Chinese to work longer, social media have reverberated with debate about the idea. On Weibo, a Twitter-like platform, posts tagged with “postpone the retirement age” have received 620m views and launched more than 100,000 discussions. Many comments have been critical, with some blaming the country’s draconian one-child-per-couple policy for exacerbating the population’s ageing. (The limit was increased to two children in 2016, and will soon be raised again, to three.) In 2020 a survey of 96,000 people by a newspaper in Wuhan found that more than 80% opposed later retirement. They wondered whether they would have the stamina to keep working into their 60s, and also whether—if not in a secure job already—they would still be employable. Firms often discriminate against older people when recruiting.

Concerns about the possible impact on social stability may explain why the government’s plans have kept slipping. In 2008 it hinted that reforms would begin in 2010. They didn’t. In 2015 a senior official said a detailed plan would be revealed in 2017. Again, no show. The government does not always pay much heed to public opinion when shaping policy: the one-child restriction was never popular. But in this case it may worry about angering a large number of people in urban areas where it is especially keen to prevent unrest (the one-child policy was most resented in the countryside). Most farmers carry on working until they are forced to stop by poor health: a rural pension scheme was introduced in 2009, but it provides far less support than urban residents enjoy.

Lifting the retirement age is a bit more popular among government employees. Of almost 170,000 respondents to a survey conducted in 2016 by China Youth Daily, an official newspaper, more than 80% said delaying retirement was more favourable to government employees (presumably because such people are considered less likely to be fired for becoming older and therefore, as is commonly imagined, less energetic). One civil servant told Xinhua his boss had doctored his own records to make his age appear younger. “This way, he holds onto power longer,” the bureaucrat said.

But young workers grumble about raising the age. They suspect they will have to wait longer for promotions as older workers occupy jobs for longer. Online, they use a common idiom to describe such seniors, accusing them of “squatting on the toilet without taking a shit”. In reality, lifting the retirement age will be harder on older workers who may struggle to retain their jobs when so many of their younger peers are far better educated. And concerns about job insecurity, especially as they get older, are pushing more young people to apply for jobs in the civil service.

Raising retirement ages may create another problem. China’s fertility rate (the average number of children a woman can expect to have in her lifetime) is among the world’s lowest. On May 31st the Communist Party said married couples would be allowed to have three children to help the country “cope” with its ageing. (In 2018 the share of people over 60 was almost one-fifth; by 2050 it will be more than one-third.) But many families rely on grandparents for child care. When parents retire, the probability that their child gives birth increases by between 44% and 61%, says a study by Fudan University. If grandparents have to work longer, the government will have to spend more on kindergartens and introduce rules to force employers to make better provisions for working parents. Grappling with China’s demographic woes will involve many tough reforms. ¦

A version of this article was published online on June 22nd 2021

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline "Vanguard of the non-working class"