Sentences with phrase «industrial overcapacity»

"Industrial overcapacity" refers to a situation where the production capacity of industries or factory systems exceeds the current demand for goods or services. Basically, it means there is more capacity to make products than the market needs or can absorb at a given time. Full definition
Consider the backdrop: China suffers industrial overcapacity, all countries need new energy infrastructure and markets for pricing and trading carbon are emerging.
The People's Bank of China has not adjusted interest rates since October 2015, and analysts don't expect any short - term easing steps as focus remains on reduction of industrial overcapacity and stemming credit risks.
Companies and governments haven't done enough to trim industrial overcapacity, focusing on wrong - headed programs like Cash for Clunkers that artificially boost demand.
The document called for curbing industrial overcapacity, reining in the growth of money supply and stabilizing China's housing market.
And coal prices have plummeted globally, as China tackles its air pollution crisis and industrial overcapacity by cutting coal use.
And that's assuming all goes well with China's bubbling assets, industrial overcapacity, aging population and export dependency problem.
Evidence of structural reforms addressing excess debt, industrial overcapacity and low corporate profitability is needed, particularly in China, to spark a sustainable EM bull market.
Building homes in overseas markets like Hong Kong, Malaysia, Australia or New York City and marketing them to investment - minded buyers back home has become a cottage industry for China's larger property developers, who also promote the strategy as a way to help export China's industrial overcapacity.
But given no one knows how much time China has before its debt pile up, industrial overcapacity, environmental degradation and social tensions prove hard to control, erring too much on the safe side may be risky too.
Chinese leaders have repeatedly said China needs to wean itself off a reliance on investment and exports, which in parts of the country have led to industrial overcapacity and pollution, and rely more on services and consumption, more akin to the developed economies of the West.
The good word of MOST notwithstanding, industrial overcapacity has been a theme in the past six months, and the European Chamber of Commerce in China has just published a study on the causes and impacts of excess capacity in six industrial sectors, including the wind components sector.
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