As it reins in wasteful investment, China frets over growth
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[August 29, 2024] By
Ellen Zhang and Marius Zaharia
BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) - China's local governments have fallen
behind on their debt issuance plans as scrutiny mounts over potentially
wasteful infrastructure investment, fuelling talk that such funds could
be used in other areas to stimulate growth back towards target.
Investment at a municipal level has for years been one of the most
efficient tools to stabilize growth in the world's second-largest
economy, whose poor performance in recent months calls for another
injection of government stimulus.
But not all such investment has been productive, as evidenced by debt
rising faster than growth in the past decade Large sums were spent on
rail, roads and bridges that draw little traffic and are expensive to
maintain.
To rein in wasteful spending, authorities have tightened scrutiny on
investment projects, especially in China's 12 most indebted provinces.
As a result, in the first seven months of this year, local governments
have issued only 45.5% of their 3.9 trillion yuan ($546 billion) special
debt quota versus 65.7% in the same period of 2023 and 95% in 2022.
The softer-than-expected fiscal impulse risks pulling economic growth
away from this year's roughly 5% target, which is threatened by sluggish
household consumption and a severe property sector downturn.
"It has been difficult to find projects that are profitable in the near
term," said Jack Yuan, senior analyst at Moody's Ratings. "Many
provinces will have difficulties trying to meet their growth targets in
the absence of greater state-led investment."
Chinese officials said in March that local special bonds would fund
projects with "sufficient preparation" in regions with high investment
efficiency.
Yuan and other analysts expect debt issuance to pick up in coming months
as authorities prioritize reaching the growth target, as pledged at key
political meetings in July.
But this may require Beijing to greenlight new ways for cities and
provinces to spend the funds, which are typically used for
transportation, water, energy, urban landscaping and other
infrastructure.
Analysts say new areas could include buying empty apartments for social
housing or repurchasing undeveloped residential land. Such moves would
inject cash into the crisis-hit property sector, providing a lifeline
for developers to resume or accelerate construction of behind-schedule
residential projects and improving homebuyer confidence.
"The government needs to expand the scope for these bonds," said Larry
Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie, who sees real estate as a
potential new destination for such funds.
"We will see issuance accelerating, the fiscal support for the economy
will rise and then we may still be able to achieve the growth target."
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A man rides an electric motorcycle carrying water past Chow Tai Fook
Financial Center in Tianjin's Binhai new district, China May 16,
2019. Picture taken May 16, 2019. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo
Chinese newspaper Economic Observer reported in June that the
Ministry of Natural Resources had proposed that local governments
use special bonds to repurchase idle land.
Alternatively, municipal bonds could be used to swap higher-yielding
debt issued by local government financing vehicles to ease their
funding strain and reduce spillovers to the real economy as they
deleverage, Yuan from Moody's said.
WASTE
Infrastructure investment grew 4.9% year-on-year in January-July,
slower than the 6.8% rise in the same period of 2023.
One government source from Lanzhou, the capital in the indebted
Gansu province, said one area local authorities are spending less on
is urban landscaping.
While special bonds can be spent on expanding green areas, in many
cases that meant replanting a perfectly good park lawn or roadside
flowers and greenery, rather than creating new green spaces, the
source said.
This generates temporary jobs. But it does not improve living
standards long-term, nor offer any returns, while committing the
government to debt repayments. Such spending no longer occurred this
year, the source said.
"That was a waste," the source said, asking not to be named as they
were not authorized to speak to media. "The principle was to spend
the money, otherwise it would be taken away."
A source in the Beijing municipal government said "in the past, it
was easier to apply for funds. When anyone applied for projects they
would ask for as much as possible."
Now "we need to figure out why the project must be done. They say
every project is a cost."
One policy adviser, who also requested anonymity due to the topic's
sensitivity, said leaning on government investment to fuel growth
has resulted in debt and corruption. Local officials need to find
projects that produce enough income to repay debt interest, the
adviser said.
"But such projects don't exist every year," the adviser said,
explaining the slow debt issuance. "It's better to give the money to
low-income groups to boost consumption."
(Graphic by Kripa Jayaram; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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