主题:【文摘】姬宇阳:这次 让F1刺激你 -- 平头百姓
清晨起来看到这一篇,来不及翻译(呵呵,也实在翻译不好),各位老大见谅。拿来算作一家之言吧。
The Playground
I was checking into my hotel. The polite receptionist in a sharp
uniform processed my details and gave me a key for four days. I was
confused. I thought that I would leave in three days. She told me that
the room was kept for me the day before. It was booked half a year ago
for over four hundred dollars per night. I was a bit taken aback and
asked if it was the same for everyone else. "Of course, it's F1", she
replied.
Lucky someone else was paying my bill.
Shanghai was hosting the Grand Prix for the first time. It was another
coming-out party for Shanghai. The hotels in the city were having a
blast. The Grand Prix venue had capacity for 150,000 and was sold out.
Tens of thousands flew in to see the event. The event could increase
tourist dollars by $150 million. I had not seen a spectacle like this
since the Three Tenors at the Forbidden City two years ago.
As the global economy has recovered, businesses around the world again
go over the top to entertain their top clients. Where they choose the
venue depends on which city happens to be hot. Shanghai is it for now.
No self-respecting financial types want to hear 'wow, you haven't been
to Shanghai'. Hence, businesses around the world want to entertain
their top clients in Shanghai. The Grand Prix offered the occasion for
hosting such parties.
I took a taxi to join a dinner with a bunch of financial types. I told
the taxi driver in Shanghainese dialect on where to go. He replied in
Mandarin or Putonghua. I asked him if he was local. 'You don't have to
learn Shanghainese. We speak Putonghua here', he replied proudly.
'What's wrong with my Shanghainese?' I asked. 'Your Shanghainese
sounded out-of-townish. So I spoke Putonghua to help you out', he
replied.
I was mortified.
Ten years ago, a Chinese Indonesian businessman took me to an
entertainment venue-one of those places for overseas Chinese businessmen
in Shanghai. I asked a waiter for a drink in Shanghainese. 'You little
bi-san, how did you get in here', he screamed at me.
'Never speak Shanghainese here. When you speak Mandarin, try to sound
like someone from Hong Kong or Taiwan', he advised me.
He was born in Shanghai, raised in Taiwan, and migrated to Indonesia to
take advantage of its textile export quotas to the US. He could speak
both Shanghainese and Mandarin perfectly but had to fake a bad Southern
accent to get around.
Shanghai was experiencing a massive boom then. It offered
foreigner-only properties to Taiwanese and Hong Kongie buyers. Many
took up the offer and fueled the boom. Taiwanese businessmen were often
buying properties to keep mistresses in the western part of the city,
where high-rise apartment buildings went up first. Expensive
entertainment venues were popping up for entertaining Taiwanese
businessmen where they probably met their mistresses first. They were
the only ones with money in town.
The boom crashed; property prices dropped by over a half in the
following five years. Many of those Taiwanese guys went belly up,
leaving behind a wave of bad debts behind at Chinese state banks that
still haunt China today.
'Did I try to forget Shanghainese subconsciously?' I thought guiltily to
myself.
The restaurant was on the top two floors of an old colonial building
along the Huangpu River-part of the riverfront strip that was the
British Concession in Shanghai popularly known as the bund. Expensive
marbles seemed to fill every bit of the surface in the restaurant. The
furniture looked similar to a funky fusion restaurant in Sydney. Maybe
the owners were Australian.
The Grand Prix crowds were appearing in the restaurant. The waiters
were scurrying around to keep champagne and wine flowing. There were
occasional protests on how long it took food to arrive. Considering the
patronage level, the restaurant was as efficient as any in London or
Sydney.
The patrons were mostly westerners. The Chinese around were speaking
English also. Quite a few white people were waiting there. When I saw
the bill, it became apparent why they wanted to work there instead of
Sydney or London.
Fireworks went up on the other side of the river during the dinner,
illuminating the shiny skyscrapers towering along the riverbank. The
diners could see the striking shapes of the skyscrapers in varying
glows.
'See the buildings! It's all tangible! So bullish', one guy gushed.
Shanghai has created an impressive skyline on the east side of the river
that was paddy field fifteen years ago. The colonial buildings on the
west side have been kept. Neon lights profusely adorn the old and new
buildings, creating the pride of Shanghai-a postcard view of a modern
city.
The crowds surged onto the terrace after the meal to enjoy the river
view in a gentle autumn breeze. Suddenly, the lights went out. 'Who
switched off the lights? Is the bubble bursting?' a colleague murmured
fearfully in the dark.
'Don't worry. It is regulation time to switch off the lights. The
party is still on', I tried to put the people at ease.
We decided to abandon the dark terrace for an expat hangout in the old
French Concession area. It was a French colonial building in the middle
of a park. Throngs of people, mostly westerners, were surging into the
building through a tunnel of neon lights. The bouncers were trying hard
to keep out many who were already drunk.
Inside, the people, mostly westerners, were packed solid in the middle.
Many tried to dance. But it was mostly jumping up and down. Many
financial types in Hong Kong decamped for Shanghai in 2001 after the
tech burst. Some of them were in the dancing crowd, celebrating their
good fortunes again.
There was a sit-down section on the side where crowds of Chinese were
speaking loudly in English to each other. They were mostly overseas
Chinese or Chinese Chinese who had spent sometime abroad. Many probably
joined western companies to work in Shanghai. With their international
salaries, they could pay Hong Kong prices in Shanghai.
Through a side door, there was another hall; the youngish crowds packed
the place and were dancing to techno beat. The DJ was a white guy. It
was just loud music. Everyone in the crowd looked spaced out. I saw
similar scenes in Jakarta in 1996.
Speaking English is the new sign of status in town. The bad southern
accent doesn't carry the same prestige as before. Some Chinese guys
that I had come across faked to have forgotten Chinese after spending a
couple of years abroad. Shanghai is in a hurry to move up.
Taiwanese guys are buying up a lot of the apartments in Shanghai at
steep prices. I heard that Taiwanese and Hong Kongies accounted for 80%
of the buyers at the top end of the Shanghai property market. Their
money is fueling the boom. Poor Taiwanese now spend more money but get
less respect.
The 'Buckingham Palace' was going up this time. I saw it. It was an
apartment block. I always guessed that it would happen one day but
didn't expect it so soon. I thought it would be a sign of the top.
Many Taiwanese want to live in the Buckingham Place and would pay up, I
guess.
Selling apartments in the city center to non-residents has been the main
source of money for building Shanghai. Hundreds of thousands of
original residents have been resettled to outlying areas. 'People speak
English in the center, Mandarin in Putong (or East Side of the Hungpu
River), and Shanghainese in Nanhui' goes one joke. Nahui is a farming
county two hours away from the city center. Actually, it was mostly
Taiwanese properties in the city center. The westerns just rent from
them.
There were more trees, I noted. I was puzzled at first: how could trees
grow so fast? Then I saw the big urns holding up the trees on top of
concrete payments. Shanghai found a quick way to make the city green.
Shanghai's flexibility is why it has risen so fast. No other city in
the world would have vacated the city center to build properties for
non-residents in exchange for money to put up high-rises, elevated roads
and neon lights. Shanghai is willing to pay any price to be a great
city again, it seems.
Taiwanese money is at the center of Shanghai's rise. Hundreds of
thousands of Taiwanese had taken their life savings to Shanghai. These
people missed Taiwan's boom and wanted to get rich in Shanghai's
development. They have opened thousands of restaurants, boutique shops
and entertainment venues in a 21st gold rush. They are investing so far
ahead of Shanghai people's income (average wage $215/month last year)
that most of them would fail, I believe. But Shanghai would get to keep
all those nicely decorated shops.
Investing in Shanghai property is the biggest game for Taiwanese. Most
believe that Shanghai property prices would go up and Renminbi would
appreciate. They just cannot have enough of a good thing. Shanghai
sold 22 million square meters or $13 billion (or 17.3% of Shanghai's
GDP) of new residential properties last year. This year's sales are
rising at least by 10% in volume and 30% in value.
Taiwanese export businesses along the coast have made enormous amounts
of profits from taking advantage of cheap Chinese labor. These monies
usually go into USD assets via Hong Kong financial institutions but have
poured into Shanghai properties since Renminbi appreciation became a hot
topic.
The expectation that Renminbi would appreciate is keeping money pouring
into China even though the US has raised interest rate three times and
China hasn't. The game keeps going as long as the money keeps coming.
Andy Xie (from Shanghai)
- 相关回复 上下关系8
【文摘】姬宇阳:这次 让F1刺激你 平头百姓 字2563 2004-09-25 15:28:41
Andy Xie on Shanghai Grand Prix
😁同好,同好. Chieftain 字0 2004-09-28 20:37:55
😁这篇随笔写得不赖啊,谢谢转载。 西风陶陶 字0 2004-09-26 11:58:53
如果喜欢以后可以随时转载。 拉兹 字252 2004-09-26 17:35:19
😁那就有劳拉兹兄乐。 西风陶陶 字0 2004-09-26 17:45:51
😉世界上的赛车门类巨多。但F1是最昂贵的。到现在也就是几个厂商 Highway 字393 2004-09-25 21:10:14
🙂真的很喜欢F1 玄武 字191 2004-09-25 20:45:12