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To: Alex who wrote (29309)3/3/1999 4:36:00 AM
From: Bobby Yellin  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116871
 
great digging Alex!
Bobby



To: Alex who wrote (29309)3/3/1999 5:04:00 AM
From: Bobby Yellin  Respond to of 116871
 
I wonder why the Indian government just doesn't go out and buy some gold mines and then save the money that way..sell the gold and silver that way...I wonder whom I can suggest that too..
Why not compete with Munk and Placer dome guy..they can really get assets way under water now..this way they can plan for the future when their population out populates the rest of the world..they can become king of gold mining and get heaps of money back later on with their investments now..
I think that is a much better scheme and doesn't put the Indian people at the mercy of the cutthroat financial types..they saw how England
worked..a lot of still alive who saw how the partitioning worked..



To: Alex who wrote (29309)3/4/1999 8:14:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116871
 
China sinks into the red

China's economy is losing its sparkle

The Chinese government is to set to announce its
largest budget deficit in 20 years as it struggles to
maintain the momentum of economic growth.

In a speech to delegates of the National People's
Congress on Friday, Prime Minister Zhu Rongji is
expected to announce that this year's budget deficit will
be 150.3bn yuan (£11bn, or $18bn), an increase of 56%
since last year.

The government hopes to
maintain a 7% growth rate for
the economy by boosting
spending on public
infrastructure projects,
following 1998's 7.8% growth.
But that will be difficult, as
China's exports failed to
increase at all last year after
achieving double digit growth
in previous years.

"The external economic
environment we face this
year remains extremely serious .. It will be difficult to
see a relatively big increase in domestic consumption
demand for a period of time," Mr Zhu reportedly will say.

China faces problems in privatising its ailing state
industries whose losses are absorbing an increasing
share of public spending.

Many economists are sceptical of China's ability to
reach its growth target this year.

Although the budget deficit is still only 2% of GDP, tax
revenues are in long term decline. Foreign companies
have reported increased pressure by the tax authorities
who are scrutinising their bills for missing back
payments.

Banking reform

China's banking sector is also is trouble, after the failure
of one of the largest foreign investment trusts, GITIC
(Guangdong International Trust and Investment
Company) in December.

The government has said it will close down other failing
investment trusts, which have been a vehicle for foreign
investment in China but have become over-exposed in
the property sector.

As well as paying the cost of such closures, the
governor of the Bank of China, Dai Xianglong, announced
that bad debts held by China's four state-owned
commercial banks would be restructured, by setting up
four asset management companies to mop up the
problem loans. Some estimates put the total bad debts
as high as $200bn.

The government may have to introduce measures to
boost the small domestic bond market in order to fund
its increased borrowing.

Reflation in Hong Kong

The government of the special administrative region of
Hong Kong has also announced budget-busting
measures to counter-act the effects of the worst
recession in living memory.

Donald Tsang, Hong Kong's financial secretary, said that
the budget deficit would rise to 2.8% of GDP (gross
domestic product) as growth stagnates after a year in
which it fell by 5%.

He plans to give out a 10% rebate to all taxpayers, as
well as boosting spending on infrastructure such as a
new Disney theme park.

But public sector wages would be frozen, and the Mass
Transit System partly privatised.

The Hong Kong government also said that it would
gradually sell most of its $15bn holding in Hong Kong
companies which it acquired last year in order to stop
speculation against its currency, and merge the stock
exchange and futures market.
news.bbc.co.uk