EconoMonitor

Sixty Percent of China’s Rich Want to Leave the Country

About 60 percent of the rich Chinese people, each of whom has a net asset of at least 60 million yuan ($9.44 million), said they intended to migrate from China, a report has found.

About 14 percent of them have either already migrated from China or have applied for migration.

-China Daily

Victor Shih (@vshih2) noticed this article and tweeted it, surprised that China Daily would deign to print it.

Here’s the chart.

Wouldn’t this fit with his story regarding Chinese capital flight? In April, I highlighted his theory on the fragile state of China’s FX reserves. The bullet points are as follows:

  • China has three structural causes of capital flight. First, wealth in China is highly concentrated. Using three different methodologies based on survey data, data on large share holders of listed company, and data on the total financial and real estate assets in China, the wealthiest 1% urban households command between 2 and 5 trillion USD in wealth.
  • A 20% reallocation of this wealth overseas would cause a substantial but likely controllable drainage of China’s foreign exchange reserve.
  • A 30-40% reallocation of this wealth overseas would see the depletion of China’s foreign exchange reserve by close to 1 trillion USD or more.
  • Second, underground banks, false trade invoicing, and now an experimental scheme to allow individual investors to invest overseas provide multiple channels for capital to circumvent China’s exchange control.
  • Third, real deposit interest rates are negative and will remain so in the foreseeable future, thus prompting wealthy households to speculate overseas on a large scale if relative returns suddenly decrease in China.
  • If the top 1% of households in China reallocates 1 trillion USD of their wealth overseas, the central bank then will be faced with a choice between large scale quantitative easing and an illiquid banking system.
  • In the short term, China’s only recourse to reduce the volatile state of its foreign exchange reserve is to bring real interest rates back to positive territory.

This does bear watching. Hopefully, Dr. Shih will have a post up on this at some point.

This post originally appeared at Credit Writedowns and is reproduced with permission.

2 Responses to “Sixty Percent of China’s Rich Want to Leave the Country”

Danny EnternationalNovember 6th, 2011 at 8:15 am

Hello…

Thank you a lot for giving everyone remarkably memorable chance to read from this website. It really is very pleasant and also packed with a lot of fun for me and my office mates to visit the blog on the least thrice every week to read through the newe…

Reviews On CapsiplexNovember 7th, 2011 at 4:10 am

Hi…

I have to express thanks to you just for bailing me out of this particular predicament. After researching throughout the the net and meeting advice which are not productive, I was thinking my entire life was well over. Being alive without the presence …

Most Read | Featured | Popular

Blogger Spotlight

Ed Dolan Ed Dolan's Econ Blog

Edwin G. Dolan is an economist and educator with a Ph.D. from Yale University. Early in his career, he was a member of the economics faculty at Dartmouth College, the University of Chicago, and George Mason University. From 1990 to 2001, he taught in Moscow, Russia, where he and his wife founded the American Institute of Business and Economics (AIBEc), an independent, not-for-profit MBA program. Since 2001, he has taught at several universities in Europe, including Central European University in Budapest, the University of Economics in Prague, and the Stockholm School of Economics in Riga, where he has an ongoing annual visiting appointment. During breaks in his teaching career, he worked in Washington, D.C. as an economist for the Antitrust Division of the Department of Justice and as a regulatory analyst for the Interstate Commerce Commission, and later served a stint in Almaty as an adviser to the National Bank of Kazakhstan. When not lecturing abroad, he makes his home in San Juan Islands, Washington.

Economics Blog Aggregator

Our favorite economics blogs aggregated.