Hovering over the issue of soybean demand is China’s reported slowing GDP growth. Second quarter growth was reported at 6.3 percent, far better than the 1.1 percent U.S. growth. Though China’s growth in real terms versus year-on-year was an annualized 3.2 percent. Critics will even question that rate, citing the increasing opaqueness of certain economic data and Beijing’s tendency to smooth uncomfortable information. However, the youth unemployment rate has nearly doubled to 20 percent since COVID, and deflation is now the risk.   Reduced demand from China and the diversion of FDI to other countries has helped other parts of the world. But some macroeconomists are not impressed with Beijing’s conventional...