Very good point Seraphim.
I believe Peter Schiff and Jim Rogers are absolutely correct about China.
There will be hard landing for China.
But they will handle it, unlike America.
Peter Schiff's main point is, although China has its share of bubbles but fundamentally, it is production based economy.
America is borrowing and spending based economy.
When a country actually work and produce, they can get over setbacks.
But when a country just borrow and spend by exporting its currency, they CANNOT get over setbacks.
That is the key point of Peter Schiff.
We should listen to Peter Schiff and Jim Rogers and start to get back to work instead of just exporting fiat currency and spending like there's no tomorrow.
I used to believe this. However, Schiff's logic is based on a number of assumptions which aren't necessarily true at all.
First, let's say you have 1k factories that can produce widget A, and I have no factories at all. If the market is demanding widget As, well then clearly you have an advantage.
However, lets say the demand for widget As drops to 0 and the market now demands widget Bs. Also, lets say the cost of converting a factory from producing widget As to producing widget Bs is more expensive than building a factory to produce widget Bs. Who has the advantage now? We're on equal footing.
China has a bunch of factories orientated around producing cheap goods Americans want. When the demand for this dries up, there is no guarantee that these factories can be easily switched over to producing other kinds of goods. Schiff makes a huge assumption by saying that they can, but the truth is, when Americans run out of the money to buy cheap plastic toys and clothes at Walmart--China's entire manufacturing base may be hopelessly obsolete.
Further, production is every year becoming more and more mechanized and less labor intensive. In five years it may be cheaper to build a factory that can produce goods almost exclusively with robots than it will be to use China's factories. Again, in this instance the Chinese have no advantage.
One other assumption Schiff makes is that the Chinese can just switch over to making goods their people want and start consuming them. I've already dealt with the idea that they can just "switch over" easily, so let's touch on the other assumption.
Its like theres some bias against the service sector economy. By definition, half the economy should be service and half should be production. Service is an entire 50%. You can't just pull that out of nowhere overnight. You need a system of transporting the goods, you need a system of warehouses, of selling, of getting consumers financing to purchase and on and on. Schiff assumes that its easier to create a service sector part of the economy than it is to create a producing sector. This is a huge assumption and may not be true at all.