In what may be the most direct admission that China's economy is about to grind to a deflationary halt, today China's Global Times, a newspaper which is seen as a propaganda companion to the official People's Daily, revealed data showing this year's proposed salary guidelines according to which there is a broad wage growth declines in virtually every single province on the mainland, which according to the Chinese publication "confirms the country is experiencing an economic slowdown."

Salary guidelines are issued by local governments as a reference to help firms decide how much they should increase their employees' salaries. They are based on labor market conditions and economic growth, among other factors.

Global Times notes that compared to 2015 salary guidelines, wages in 2016 have grown at a slower rate in virtually all 19 provinces and regions that have so far published their annual guidelines for firms. Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province has not released salary guidelines for years as the region has been experiencing a recession and therefore wages are not generally increasing.

Seventeen provinces have seen a decrease in salary standards, including North China's Hebei Province, South China's Hainan Province, Northwest China's Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region and East China's Jiangxi Province. The only increases were seen in Southwest China's Guizhou Province and Beijing Municipality.

"2016's guidelines have seen a slowing of salary growth after years of increases, which means that the speed of wage growth has surpassed economic growth since China's labor contract law was adopted in 2007," Wang Jiangsong, a professor at the China Institute of Industrial Relations, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Confirming that the only way for Chinese wage growth is down, Wang Jiangsong, a professor at the China Institute of Industrial Relations, told the Global Times that "since China's labor contract law was adopted in 2007, wage increases have surpassed economic growth." He said the slowdown reflects China's economic downturn. It also means that local workers will not be happy.

But more troubling was Wang's next admission: "the decrease reflects Chinese economic downturn, which is just now beginning and will last a long time since China has passed its economic boom period in which many problems were hidden but now those problems will gradually surface."

In short, declining wage growth, with aggregate 2016 demand driven by the biggest credit impulse and expansion in Chinese history. To all those who truly believe in the global reflation these, we wish you the best of luck.