Originally posted by Wayne
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any one been to china?
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Originally posted by Gary Lin View PostAnd we keep saying we have to increase productivity in NZ...
Productivity increase when you produce more with less (usually less labour).
Producing more of something you don't need may increase the GDP but it can't go on forever - surely!
Which is why China is setting itself up for a big property bust. Pyramid schemes never last.
The bigger fool theory works until you run out of fools - or there just aren't any bigger ones.
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after 19 days i would say the most popular car in china is the audi usually black followed closly by vw, mercedies, bmw volvo and all the japanese models coming a distant last is anything chinese apart from electric scooters of which there are billions, our tour guide told us that chinese people dont want chinese cars also you dont see old cars nothing older than late 90s
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There is a rule in China that private use cars can only last 10 years. I'm not sure if they have relaxed those rules though.
Those fancy european cars are assembled in China, with joint venture with Chinese films. So apart from maybe the engine and the cpu electronics, essentially they are pretty much chinese cars lol.
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Originally posted by Gary Lin View PostThere is a rule in China that private use cars can only last 10 years. I'm not sure if they have relaxed those rules though.
Those fancy european cars are assembled in China, with joint venture with Chinese films. So apart from maybe the engine and the cpu electronics, essentially they are pretty much chinese cars lol.
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What fun it must be traveling with such calm and considerate people.
China detains 25 who opened plane exits
Chinese police detained 25 plane passengers who opened emergency exits before take-off after becoming angry that their flight was delayed by snow, state media reported, in the latest incident of rowdy behaviour by Chinese travellers.Last month a budget flight from Thailand to China was forced to return to Bangkok after a Chinese passenger threw hot water at a cabin attendant.
Chinese state-run media branded four unruly passengers on board as "barbarians," reporting that one of them had threatened to blow up the plane in a row over a seating arrangement.
An airport in Kunming saw chaotic scenes in 2013, when thousands of angry passengers were stranded for hours after heavy fog delayed flights.
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