The economy’s sluggishness is even raising the prospect that China may be entering an era of much slower economic growth, and may never get rich.
Whether it chugs ahead at 3% to 4% annually or flirts with Japan-like “lost decades” of stagnation, it looks set to disappoint its leaders, its youth and much of the world.
More immediately, the whole gamut of U.S.-China tensions is back on investors’ radar – climate, defense and security, and semiconductors and tech.
U.S. climate envoy John Kerry is in Beijing for a three-day visit, China’s defense minister Li Shangfu met veteran U.S. diplomat Henry Kissinger, and U.S. chip company executives met with top Biden administration officials to discuss China policy.
In Thailand, meanwhile, parliament convenes on Wednesday to choose a new prime minister. Pita Limjaroenrat led his Move Forward party to election victory in May but failed last week to win the required backing of more than half of the legislature.
Ahead of the vote, the Thai baht surged 1.6% on Tuesday to a two-month high against the dollar. It was the currency’s best day since November.