International Economic Week In Review: August 24th - 28th

 | Aug 30, 2015 04:30AM ET

The big story this week was obviously the Chinese stock market. Although the government threw literally every possible policy at it in an attempt to thwart the decline, the market moved lower. But before looking at the carnage and policy response, lets answer an important question: why is the stock market suddenly so important to the Chinese? There are several answers, starting with China’s desire to enter the first world economy club, where a well-developed equity market is a pre-requisite for entry. Second, and probably more important, in a bid to increase personal consumption, the Chinese government is stoking the wealth-effect: a rising stock market makes people feel richer, leading to an increase in personal consumption expenditures. Hopefully, this increase in consumption will begin to displace manufacturing and capital expenditures as the primary drivers of Chinese growth.

Lets begin by looking at the daily chart:

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