@Alien: I often mention that I have a problem understanding your posts. For the hell of it I ran a Gunning Fog Index on you last post. It was 142 words in 3 sentences for an average of 47 words per sentence. The grade level was 27.1 (A typical Masters degree in the US is grade level 18.0).
I sincerely hope you are not an English teacher.
@Alien: Sorry, you don't get it.
Again you revert to ideology to try to explain... what? I can't follow what you mean.
I tried to be ideology free in showing how using a single metric can sub optimize any effort and will result in unintended, and unwanted consequences.
My hypothesis is that this, or tends to be, universal and would occur regardless of ideology. I am observing action and results without a set of jingoist terminology to lean on.
I used the word "yardstick" and could have used "measurement" and tried to point out that using a SINGLE metric results in distortions. A SINGLE metric is useful, easily understood, but its simplicity hides the prospect for distortion. Think of the nail factory that is rewarded by the weight of the nails of its output. The allocation of resources would be extremely different if the nail factory was rewarded based on the quantity of nails produced.
I do not imply that my yardstick is money. You make that assumption. In fact, the yardstick I have in mind is GDP. In an earlier post I pointed out that GDP is expressed in money but that the value of any particular "money" can vary. A few hours trying to understand GDP, how it is arrived at and how it is expressed in terms of money, can lead to the conclusion the GDP is basically a guess measured in current money values. Further, a GDP number alone can be made so much more interesting when it is compared to, say, the population number that produces the GDP.
You asked, referring to China: "Why did 'they' choose to?"
Honestly, I have no idea "why." Is it because China's preferred yardstick is GDP and all is driven on achieving a China GDP greater than the US GDP?
What is clear over the last two decades is more GDP is preferred by China, and, that as pollution is a byproduct of GDP growth, for some perverse reason, increased pollution has been considered a positive indication of growth.
I think, but I am not sure, maybe, I dunno.
You nasty angry China hating McDonalds eating creepy colonist running dog have just insulted the noble Chinese taxi driver and the culture of this welcoming pristine peace loving land. May the power of the Mighty Matt fall upon you and cleanse you of your sins.
Can you tell I am bored?
No results found.
Good for quality, but pricey, hand tools.
Be aware they will push whatever they are selling. Some of the staff have no idea about the technical side of appliances.
I went there to buy a stove. I repeatedly told them I would be using bottled gas. They sold me a stove. When I went to my local gas guy, I learned there are at least three kinds of gas sold. Luckily, B&Q did not deliver as promised. I went back to the store and discovered they had sold me a stove they needed to be hooked up to the gas main. I got my money back.
The sales lady was almost in tears, 没有问题!I don't know if it a safety or design issue, but I would think B&Q would know and care.
Last week had an 8:45am flight.
Subway starts at 9am. I have no idea where to catch an airport express bus. Eight taxis refused to go to the airport. After almost an hour standing on Beijing Lu took a black taxi, this dude drives slower than my mother, 120 yuan.
Flight back was delayed so I learned the subway stops running at 6:10pm.
Getting a taxi back was easy, more taxis than customers. Taxi was 87 yuan including 1o yuan toll, airport to Beichen area. Yes, he took a longer route than necessary.
Kunming imagines being a gateway for international travelers. New airport but hard to get to and from it.
World Class Airport, NOT!
Tonight "Peacock", a performance by Yang Liping (杨丽萍), to begin her world tour, 8pm, 100-1680 yuan at Yunna Haigeng Auditorium.
Saw this lady perform at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium, in California, in 1995. Quite a good and interesting show.
I'm going to try to make it.
Not so good. Kimchi had a very sour taste. Other food was nothing to brag about. I don't think I would go back.
This bus station is not located as indicated. It is further North!
Around Town: China's last narrow gauge passenger train
Posted byAnyone know if this train is still operating?
Kunming's metro could cost 300 billion yuan
Posted by@HFCAMPO
You are seriously wrong in thinking "They would have never begun... unless they knew...." First of all, the Metro is a prestige project which immediately puts "profit" on a remote back burner out of sight never to be seriously considered. The "profit" in this type of project in the construction, materials and labor so all that money only exists if the thing is built.
The process of calculating either payback, ROI, or even profit is a pretty straight forward.Usually, they do a NPV (Net Present Value) calculation based on a myriad of assumptions, guesses, wishes and a few facts. As all of these things are also based on an additional myriad of assumptions, guesses, wishes and a few facts. One key component is "ridership" which is a guess, usually a well calculated, detailed SWAG (Scientific Wild Assed Guess) but a guess nonetheless. Not to bore the analytically challenged each guess in this pile of guesses, and a few facts, has a range, low to high. The guy who cranks the algorithm knows what the Boss wants so will skew all the little guesses to ensure the big final guess gives the Boss what he/they want. They want a subway. The subway will be justified with numbers. My favorite BS component is "contribution to the general economic growth of _____." You can fill in the location, Kunming, Yunnan or California.
A subway is built because it is wanted not because it would make money. It is wanted by the power elites so they can pat their own backs. It is wanted by capitalists who will bid low and will trust the power guys to ante up to keep the project going. Lots of money to share in 300,000,000,000 yuan.
Note: This is not a Chinese thing. This has been going on in the U.S. for a long time.
Metro Line 1 begins passenger trial period
Posted byThink of the subway as a money train.
As long as there is something to tear down and build or rebuild, two things are going on. First, GDP goes up and as a tool for rating government officials you just can't beat impressive, never ending, visible projects adding jobs and boosting GDP.
Second, tearing down and building is where the money is. There is a lot of opportunity to make and pass money around. When you figure in what can be skimmed by using substandard materials then making more money to do it again. well, why would anyone want to stop?
Beijing Lu is a goldmine. Seems to me that there was a lot of repaving done before the Metro project started. Then just as the Metro blue walls came down beautification began. Beautification is pretty near complete, lots of trees have been cut down, but now holes, square red puddles where there were trees, and trenches across street and walk ways make walking muddy and hazardous.
Did you notice the tremendous improvement in the blue walls? No longer blue metal sheets attached to stakes, now, a cement footing is topped with aluminum framed blue composite panels. Reusable? Nope. Salvaged for sure but clearly intended for one time use.
I call that GDP enhancing "innovation."
Kunming's metro could cost 300 billion yuan
Posted byI would not expect Kunming City to be on the hook for repaying the loans. More likely, one or several entities have been set to borrow the money and operate the subway. In Beijing, a line could be operated by a company. So Line 1 might be operated by "KM Metro Line 1 Company", and so on.
But the more interesting way to look at how the loans will be serviced is looking at required riders. The operating company has two sources of revenue, riders or operating revenue and advertising. In Beijing some lines lose money operating but adverts are enough to let them be profitable.
In the aggregate, loans totaling 300 Billion yuan, for 30 years, at say 3.0% interest, would require about 15 Billion yuan in yearly payments on a fully amortized basis. If operating expenses are 100 million yuan per day, it would take more than 140 million riders per week at 2 yuan to break even.
How many people live in Kunming?
Anyway, you can expect to see lots of advertising in the Metro.
Photos of flash flooding in Yunnan's capital
Posted byThe recent flooding here reminded me of similar flooding in Beijing and Los Angeles. It seems the onset of seasonal heavy rains results in underpass flooding. In Los Angeles and Beijing, part of the problem is the accumulation of trash in storm drains. The volume and force of the rain moves the trash until it collects and restricts water flow. In both L.A. and Beijing, in the days following flooding, crews were busy opening drains fishing out trash. In subsequent weeks, flooding seems to diminish.
I agree with tigertiger's analysis of contributing factors. I would also suggest the rapid construction throughout Kunming impedes and diverts natural runoff paths resulting in unplanned volumes of runoff showing up in unplanned locations.