Of course it does, in the way that any military spending does.... J-10 puts no burden on the Chinese economy....
Of course it does, in the way that any military spending does.... J-10 puts no burden on the Chinese economy....
I thought it was $25-30 million a pop. But $25m agrees with me.J-10 is extremely cheap, $20-25 million each. How much does F-22A cost? J-10 puts no burden on the Chinese economy.
I thought it was $880 billion or am I wrong?I don't see the comparison. The US has an 8 trillion dollar debt, of which around 7 to 8% is owed to China, while China is running (currently) a 1.4 trillion dollar surplus.
J-7C/D on China in 1990 has probably a greater social burden than a J-10A is to China in 2007.
Actually it is lower, but you were right as of FY06 (which was almost 2 years ago).I thought it was $880 billion or am I wrong?
The decision on Project 76 has not been made yet. The Bharat-Rakshak article on Project 76, clearly mentions that Amur may be one of the candidates.. there seems to be great confusion sorrounding the project-76 of the indian navy.
while it was supposed to be based on the amur/lada class SSK. now there is talk about kilo-636.
can somebody please clear the air on this one ??
i visited bharat-rakshak & found that the project-76 designated as amur
which one is it actually ???
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Crobato , Project 76 is IN designation for Second line of Submarines (well not official yet any way).Amur is Project 677, not the same project
Yeah, I thought there was something wrong with 8 trillion dollars. I actually thought it would be higher now given the situation with Iraq and Afghanistan and all. The US has been spending huge amounts of money trying to rebuild these countries.Actually it is lower, but you were right as of FY06 (which was almost 2 years ago).
US government net debt is a hell of a lot more than $880 billion dollars. The total is on the US treasury website (I can't be bothered to look now), & it's closer to the previously mentioned $8 trillion than $880 billion. China alone holds almost that much US government paper.Actually it is lower, but you were right as of FY06 (which was almost 2 years ago).
No, no! Economic burden should always be calculated in local prices, & sectoral comparisons at local prices or sectoral PPP, depending on the type of comparison. Whole-economy PPP should only be used for whole-economy comparisons, even if it actually gives much the same answer for economic burden, for fear of the false apparent equivalence that you end up with, that a J-10 is worth as much as an F-22.I thought it was $25-30 million a pop. But $25m agrees with me.
Burden on economy is affected by RER. The US has a RER of 1; China 4.5 (iirc).
As it is burden on economy, it is not sectoral, i.e. RER should apply.
A thought experiment:
Nominal value, fly away cost of the Raptor is $116m; same for the J-20 is $25m. Converted into PPP it gives $116m for the Raptor and $112.5m for the J-10.
Producing a J-10 represents the same burden to Chinese economy as producing a Raptor does to the US.
I did indeed use the Tkacik approach and waited for you to comment on it.No, no! Economic burden should always be calculated in local prices, & sectoral comparisons at local prices or sectoral PPP, depending on the type of comparison. Whole-economy PPP should only be used for whole-economy comparisons, even if it actually gives much the same answer for economic burden, for fear of the false apparent equivalence that you end up with, that a J-10 is worth as much as an F-22.
BTW, that's how Mr. Tkacik calculated Chinese defence spending. His figure implicitly assumes that a J-10 & an F-22 are worth much the same. So your little thought experiment is very useful indeed for highlighting the implications of his methodology.
Yeah, sorry I was wrong the budget deficit is somewhere around a trillion dollars and according to US national debt clock the public debt is close to 9 trillion.US government net debt is a hell of a lot more than $880 billion dollars. The total is on the US treasury website (I can't be bothered to look now), & it's closer to the previously mentioned $8 trillion than $880 billion. China alone holds almost that much US government paper.
Or if he was referring to Chinese foreign currency holdings, the $1400 billion figure is probably pretty close.
About their "surplus" That is their foreign currency reserves. They do NOT have a budget surplus. They have a budget defecit of less than 30 billion.I don't see the comparison. The US has an 8 trillion dollar debt, of which around 7 to 8% is owed to China, while China is running (currently) a 1.4 trillion dollar surplus.
J-7C/D on China in 1990 has probably a greater social burden than a J-10A is to China in 2007.
You could also idle it up by including the socio-economic impact of domestic (!) procurement.No, no! Economic burden should always be calculated in local prices, & sectoral comparisons at local prices or sectoral PPP, depending on the type of comparison.
Good point. There are 7 SSBNs of the Delta III class, plus 5 Victor III and 6 (tbc) Akula SSNs. Add < 5 operations Kilo. May be in bad operational shape still quite a lot of assets.doesn't Russia has naval forces in Asian waters?
I thought it was $880 billion or am I wrong?
The Chinese government also thinks that its a jobs generator, though the same can be said of the F-22. The money is only circulated within the economy, with the exception of the 3 million dollars spent on the engine, which goes to the Russians. So which is really more harmful? Hypothetically you spend $150 million on a domestic product that helps pay for domestic jobs, or spend $60 million which flies away to another country.Of course it does, in the way that any military spending does.
something is only a burden if it is spent extravagantly. If you order 60 J-10s at $20 million each, that's only $1.2 billion a year on purchasing J-10s. Not a lot, is it?I thought it was $25-30 million a pop. But $25m agrees with me.
Burden on economy is affected by RER. The US has a RER of 1; China 4.5 (iirc).
As it is burden on economy, it is not sectoral, i.e. RER should apply.
A thought experiment:
Nominal value, fly away cost of the Raptor is $116m; same for the J-20 is $25m. Converted into PPP it gives $116m for the Raptor and $112.5m for the J-10.
Producing a J-10 represents the same burden to Chinese economy as producing a Raptor does to the US.
well, when you get people with agenda doing estimations, you get ridiculous figures. I love how PPP is first used by DoD to get the 3x defense budget figure. And then PPP is used again by the China threat people).I did indeed use the Tkacik approach and waited for you to comment on it.
I do understand why he is wrong when assessing defence spending compared to an entire economy, didn't see myself walking into the same trap re sectoral PPP...
RER for the Chinese aerospace industry should be somewhere between 1 and 4.5 (and probably closer to 1 than 4.5).
it's the gov't money, as you can see they've been spending it US treasury bond (which is possibly the lowest yielding investment in the world) and most recently blackstone IPO (which they lost huge on).About the foriegn currency reserves, that is their money to spend on what they want, isn't it. I'm asking because I'm confused as to whether that $1.3 trillion is the government's money or someone else's.
I think you'd better look at Japan who's naval forces are second only to the US in technological sophistication, probably better in some ways though I don't care to argue that point. As far as SSBN's go if the topic is what asian countries have the best ones....... well, that's easy since China is the only one with SSBN. This duzn't include Russia all or part which of course are second only to the US and superior in numbers of both. It's actually exciting reading up on what Japan is doing right now and no one seems to be paying attention. Even talking about and developing light carriers. Hutch.
As far as SSK & SSBN capability goes china is head & shoulders above the rest.
SSBNS
JIN-class : 1
XIA-class: 1
SSKs
kilo-class : 12
yuan-class: 03
song-class: 12
ming-class: 17
with such fierce submarine power china stands tall in asia , as far as subs r concerned.
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Well comparing PPP depends on what is specifically being compared. In this case, I seriously doubt J-10 is anywhere near the F-22 in terms of quality.something is only a burden if it is spent extravagantly. If you order 60 J-10s at $20 million each, that's only $1.2 billion a year on purchasing J-10s. Not a lot, is it?
when i mention $20-25 million is cost including R&D. Think about it this way, J-10's development cost 20 billion Yuan = 2.5 billion USD. If they order 800 J-10s, that's only $3 million in the overall cost for R&D. F-22 on the other hand cost $350 million including R&D cost. Also, I believe F-22's flyaway is 125 - 135 million.
well, when you get people with agenda doing estimations, you get ridiculous figures. I love how PPP is first used by DoD to get the 3x defense budget figure. And then PPP is used again by the China threat people).
it's the gov't money, as you can see they've been spending it US treasury bond (which is possibly the lowest yielding investment in the world) and most recently blackstone IPO (which they lost huge on).
The Indian Kilos have since been upgraded - would that bring them up to or better the 636 Kilos ?Amur is Project 677, not the same project. Kilo 636 first came out in 1999, which is almost a decade after India signed for its Kilos. The last two Indian Kilos were still built shortly after the 636 introduction, however the contract signing for the last two Kilos would have well preceded the 636 introduction and would have been too late to incorporate the 636.
Ah. I see it. A semantic problem. You are misinterpreting the word burden. It means not only something which is difficult to support, but anything which is carried. "Economic burden" can - and in this context does - mean any cost imposed on the economy, even the lightest, most easily supportable one. It does not necessarily have connotations of excess, though it can, & clearly, that is how you have interpreted it.something is only a burden if it is spent extravagantly. If you order 60 J-10s at $20 million each, that's only $1.2 billion a year on purchasing J-10s. Not a lot, is it?...