Will China ever get rich? A new era of much slower growth dawns
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[July 18, 2023] By
Liangping Gao, Ellen Zhang and Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) - China is entering an era of much slower economic
growth, raising a daunting prospect: it may never get rich.
Whether the world's second-largest economy chugs ahead at 3-4% annually
or flirts, as some economists expect, with Japan-like "lost decades" of
stagnation, it looks set to disappoint its leaders, its youth, and much
of the world.
Policymakers hoped to narrow China's development gap with the United
States. Young Chinese went to universities to study for advanced-economy
jobs. Africa and Latin America count on China buying their commodities.
"It is unlikely that the Chinese economy will surpass that of the United
States within the next decade or two," said Desmond Lachman, a senior
fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.
He expects growth to slow to 3%, which "will feel like an economic
recession" when youth unemployment is already above 20%. "This is not
good for the rest of the world economy" either, he added.
When Japan began to stagnate in the 1990s, it had already exceeded the
average GDP per capita of high-income economies and was nearing U.S.
levels. China, however, is only just above the middle-income point.
Second-quarter growth of 6.3% underwhelmed, considering the low base
caused by last year's COVID-19 lockdowns, raising pressure on Chinese
leaders who are expected to meet this month to discuss a short-term
boost and longer-term fixes. The April-June data puts 2023 growth on
track for roughly 5%, with slower rates thereafter.
But China's annual growth averaged around 7% last decade, and more than
10% in the 2000s.
Prompted by such loss in momentum, economists no longer ascribe weak
household consumption and private-sector investment to the pandemic's
effects, blaming structural ills instead.
These include the burst of a bubble in the property sector, which
accounts for a quarter of output; one of the deepest imbalances between
investment and consumption; a mountain of local government debt; and the
Communist Party's tight grip over society, including private businesses.
And China's workforce and consumer base are shrinking while the cohort
of retirees is expanding.
"The demographic problem, hard landing of the property sector, heavy
local government debt burden, pessimism of the private sector as well as
China-U.S. tensions do not allow us to hold an optimistic view towards
mid- to long-term growth," said Wang Jun, chief economist at Huatai
Asset Management.
China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) did not reply
to Reuters questions on growth prospects, structural weaknesses and
reform plans.
WAYS OUT
NDRC head Zheng Shanjie, in a July 4 article in the official "Qiushi"
magazine, made a rare reference to the middle-income trap, saying China
needed to "accelerate the construction of a modern industrial system" to
avoid it.
Zheng was referring to developing nations' struggle to transition from
mid- to high-income levels due to rising costs and declining
competitiveness.
Economists cite China's electric vehicle boom as evidence of progress,
but much of its industrial complex is not upgrading at the same speed.
Overseas car sales account for only 1.7% of exports.
"Many observers will look at some of the companies and say, wow, China
can come up with all these fantastic products, so the future should be
bright. My question is: Do we have enough of those companies?" said
Richard Koo, chief economist at the Nomura Research Institute.
Policymakers have said they want household consumption to drive growth,
without hinting at concrete steps.
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Workers walk in a street in Beijing,
China, July 14, 2023. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Juan Orts, China economist at Fathom Consulting, said boosting
consumer demand might redirect resources away from supporting
manufacturing exporters, which partly explains hesitance towards
such reforms.
"We don't think authorities will commit to that path," said Orts,
describing it as "the way out" of economic doldrums.
Rather, China took steps the other way.
President Xi Jinping's "common prosperity" drive against inequality
has encouraged salary reductions in finance and other sectors.
Deteriorating city finances prompted pay cuts for civil servants,
feeding a deflationary spiral.
Zhao, a manager at a Beijing-based bank, feels she will never get
rich, her salary remaining unchanged through several promotions.
Instead of working hard, she said, she plans to retire in her 40s to
a smaller, cheaper city.
"I missed the golden era for banks," Zhao said on the condition of
partial anonymity as she was not authorized to speak to the media.
Many economists have called for better public healthcare, higher
pensions and unemployment benefits, and other building blocks for a
social safety net to give consumers confidence to save less.
Central bank adviser Cai Fang called this month for consumption
stimulus, including changes to China's residence permits, or hukou,
which deny public services to millions of rural migrants in the
cities they work in.
Zhu Ning, deputy dean at the Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance,
said improving social welfare could make growth rates of 3-4% more
sustainable.
'LAST CHANCE'
Koo said China's problems are more challenging than Japan's a
generation ago, giving policymakers room for error should they seize
the "last chance" to reach developed-world living standards.
China, in his assessment, has a "balance sheet recession", with
consumers and businesses repaying debt instead of borrowing and
investing.
This, he said, is how depressions start and the only cure is
"speedy, substantial and sustained" fiscal stimulus, which he did
not see as forthcoming given China's debt concerns.
Beyond that, he said stimulus must be productive, and complemented
by changes that allow the private sector to emerge from under the
shadow of the state, including through better relations with source
countries of foreign investment.
But China would need to reverse course.
Infrastructure investment in recent years has generated more debt
than growth.
As major economies try to reduce dependence on China, Beijing
remains locked in tit-for-tat trade battles, the latest over metals
used in semiconductors.
"Every time the U.S. announces some anti-China policy, the Chinese
government comes up with an equivalent one. But the Americans are
not in the middle income trap. China is," Koo said.
"If Chinese people do not reach their Chinese dreams, perhaps you
will have 1.4 billion not very happy people over there, which might
be rather destabilizing."
(Reporting by Liangping Gao, Ellen Zhang, Ziyi Tang, Kevin Yao and
Joe Cash in Beijing; writing by Marius Zaharia; editing by David
Crawshaw.)
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