Reminds me of the joke, that if you can't pay your $100,000 loan you have a problem, if you can't pay your $100,000,000 loan then the <i>bank</i> has a problem. But it captures the scale of things.<p>For literally decades people have suggested that China's economy (GDP) wasn't growing, it's money supply was. And as a result there would be a time when even with relaxed credit you could not justify adding any additional debt. At which point that particular path would be cut off and a more accurate picture of the economy would emerge. Which seems to be happening now.<p>What would be useful, but no doubt hard to get, would be a list of Chinese firms which are currently technically in default on their loans and so at risk of dissolution. And even more useful would be an understanding of how the Chinese government would treat them (would they bail them out like our government did for GM, or let them fail like Lehman Brothers?)