Perhaps, the only straw is infrastructure investment. In fact, China has planned to build more railways and highways. The so-called silk-road strategy certainly can help China to cushion a hard landing, though it is also likely that this new endeavor will cause new problems for the economy. Besides this grand project, China’s air is chocking and poisoning water; it is aging quickly; its medical services are pathetic. China has to make up the deficiency in investment in these areas. Nevertheless, to do so, China has to put adequate incentive in place first, and, due to the limits of absorption capacity and funding difficulties, public investment has to increase in a gradual fashion. Rome was not built in one day. You can build many hospitals in one year, but you cannot train qualified doctors and nurses in a short period of time.