China's economic woes embolden calls for deeper reforms
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[September 21, 2023] By
Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) -China's economic slowdown is polarising government
advisers over the best way forward, with advocates of structural reforms
now emerging from the shadows in a challenge to others calling for more
state spending to shore up faltering growth.
The rare debate among advisers, who influence policy-making but do not
wield direct power, comes as global markets scramble for clues on how
authorities will halt a downturn that has left millions without jobs,
forced investors to flee and the yuan to tank.
A dribble of piecemeal support measures from Beijing in recent months
has raised questions about the tough choices China's new economic
leadership now faces over whether to prioritize short-term relief or
long overdue reforms.
Advisers calling for immediate stimulus argue the central government's
low debt means it can shoulder the burden with municipalities to finance
infrastructure and other spending to rev up activity. But pro-reform
advisers argue the stimulus playbook that helped drive growth for
decades has run its course and that bolder structural changes to the
economy are now needed.
Both camps argue their proposals should be treated with urgency by
policymakers, ahead of the annual Central Economic Work Conference, an
agenda-setting gathering of top leaders expected in December.
"We need stronger stimulus policies and an overall plan, a package of
macroeconomic policy measures," said Yu Yongding, an influential
government economist who previously advised the central bank.
"China should issue more government bonds to finance infrastructure
investment, including more investment in public facilities such as
hospitals and old people’s homes. China should not be afraid of
increasing its budget deficit-to-GDP ratio and government bonds-to-GDP
ratio," Yu told Reuters.
China's central bank is constrained in how much it can ease monetary
policy amid fears a widening interest rate gap with the United States
would trigger capital flight and yuan falls, Yu said.
"We need to step up fiscal stimulus. There is room for the central
government to step up spending given its sound fiscal position," said an
adviser who spoke on condition of anonymity.
The central government's debt as a share of gross domestic product is
just 21%, far lower than 76% for local governments, including their
hidden debt.
China targets a budget deficit of 3.0% of GDP for 2023. Local
governments are racing to issue the 2023 quota of 3.8 trillion yuan
($520.68 billion) in special bonds this month to fund infrastructure.
The pro-reform camp is beating the drum for faster structural reforms,
including relaxing the system of residence permits, or "hukou", to spur
consumption, removing market entry barriers for private firms at the
cost of state giants.
Some are calling for reviving stalled market reforms amid signs of
increased state controls in the economy.
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A cleaning worker is seen through a glass window at a shopping mall
in the Central Business District (CBD), amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak in Beijing, China June 2, 2022. REUTERS/Tingshu
Wang/File photo
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva
told Reuters over the weekend that the Fund plans to tell China to
boost domestic consumption, rein in local government debt and clean
up its bloated property sector.
"Policy stimulus is not effective and it's just a placebo," said one
of the advisers.
Liu Shijin, an adviser to the central bank, said China must push
reforms to unleash spending power of migrant workers who had entered
cities, a view shared by former central bank head Yi Gang.
Reforms are urgently needed as growth engines such as property,
exports and infrastructure are stalling, he said.
"If we continue to focus on macroeconomic policies to stabilise
growth, the side effects will increase, and more importantly, the
opportunity for structural reform will be missed again," Liu told a
forum last month.
"It's not just macroeconomic policies that have short-term effects.
Structural reforms with expansionary effects can also have immediate
effects."
TIGHTROPE
Despite the heated debate, analysts expect Chinese leaders can walk
a tightrope between stimulus and reforms.
Rob Subbaraman, chief economist at Nomura, said short-term stimulus
would spur growth but at the cost of worsening structural
distortions. Meanwhile, structural reforms would bring short-term
pain and take longer to boost activity, but produce higher quality,
sustainable growth over time.
"China needs both, whereas it is where it is now because
historically it's relied more on policy stimulus than on the harder
structural reforms," he said.
The world's second-largest economy is showing some signs of
stabilsing after a flurry of modest policy measures, but the outlook
is clouded by a property downturn, aging demographics, high debt and
geopolitical tensions.
The Asian Development Bank on Wednesday trimmed its growth forecast
of China to 4.9% from 5.0% in July due to the weakness in the
property sector.
While structural changes require political will, pro-reform
advocates argue that without them, China will struggle to
sustainably revive confidence in its economy, especially the private
sector.
"We must return to the basis set by Deng Xiaoping, otherwise the
economy won’t be good as overseas investors don’t have confidence,"
said Yi Xianrong, an economist at Qingdao University and former
government adviser. "The economy is unlikely to pick up as long as
private firms lack the confidence to invest."
($1 = 7.2982 Chinese yuan)
(Reporting by Kevin Yao. Editing by Sam Holmes)
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