China’s economy is slowing in an orderly fashion

Headline CHINA: The economy is slowing in an orderly fashion

Significance Comparisons with two formerly fast-growing Asian neighbours, Japan and South Korea, suggest that China will continue to slow for another decade. Analysis of global growth trends over 50 years points to a strong force of ‘regression to the mean’, meaning that continued high-speed growth is statistically unlikely. Impacts Continued Chinese economic slowing will reduce global demand for resources such as iron ore and coal. Achieving productivity growth will require deepening reforms to increase the role of the market, the private sector and competition. World Bank economists emphasise that imposing stricter financial discipline is a key step to enhancing market-based productivity gains.


Significance However, the sector is held back by inefficiency in resolving financial distress, which prevents effective restructuring, closure and, more broadly, access to bank finance. Simplified insolvency procedures for SMEs that aim to remedy this are being trialled across China. Impacts Better resolution of SME insolvency is crucial for start-ups, which are the focus of recent policies for innovation-driven growth. A more flexible framework for resolving corporate failures would help China’s economy recover from shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic. SME insolvencies and their resolution are policy challenges in many jurisdictions; solutions adopted in China may inform reforms elsewhere.


2017 ◽  
Vol 45 (6) ◽  
pp. 41-49
Author(s):  
Jonathan Brookfield

Purpose To chart the influence of politics on the future of China’s economy this article draws on the insights of four experts to delineate a range of possibilities. Design/methodology/approach To better understand the factors at work the author considers the logic and research undergirding four experts’ different views of the unfolding interplay of China’s politics and its economy. Findings The four vies of China’s political and economic future: (1) A post-democratic future: Eric Li, a venture capitalist, is optimistic that today’s Chinese Communist Party can successfully meet the country’s challenges going forward. (2) China’s trapped transition: Minxin Pei, a professor of government at Claremont McKenna College, worries that political inertia may be coupled with an extended period of economic stagnation. (3) Reform, innovation and growth: Yasheng Huang, a professor of global ei8conomics and management at MIT with deep knowledge of China’s economy and Chinese business, is relatively optimistic, seeing political reform as a potential springboard for continued economic dynamism. (4) The coming Communist Party crackup: David Shambaugh, a professor of international affairs and director of the China policy program at George Washington University, suggests the increasing possibility of a coup and worries about the potential political and economic turmoil associated with such an action. Practical implications To really take advantage of its R&D investments, China needs a stronger market-based economic system, a more open and democratic political system, and a rule-based legal system that offers strong intellectual property protection. Originality/value The diverse set of possibilities for China’s political and economic future provide executives with a guide for interpreting current events as they play out.


Significance Leaders describe this as a 'new normal', backtracking on their warnings during the era of double-digit growth that failure to keep growth above 8.0% would lead to social instability. However, unrest among the 770 million strong workforce is rising rapidly, much of it directly related to the economic slowdown. Businesses are closing and employers failing to pay wages and benefits. Local authorities are responding to this unrest with greater force. Impacts Tensions between workers and the authorities will remain high as local governments and police take a tougher stance with strikers. The current crackdown on civil society will reduce NGOs' ability to intercede in and successfully resolve labour conflicts. The impact of the economic slowdown will broaden to include workers in the mining and energy sectors. Low-paid public sector workers will stage strikes and protests as cash-strapped local governments cut employee pension and other benefits.


Subject Prospects for the global economy in the fourth quarter. Significance Three threats are on the horizon. Firstly, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) might raise interest rates this year. This move, though well signalled, may have negative repercussions, especially in emerging markets (EMs). Secondly, China's economy, a key to global growth, is slowing and its financial markets are exceptionally volatile. These factors have already elicited policy interventions such as renminbi depreciation and further rate cuts by the People's Bank of China (PBoC). Finally, there is no apparent end in sight to weak global demand and the fall in commodities prices that has left commodity-exporting countries struggling with precipitous drops in revenue.


Subject US monetary policy outlook for 2016 and its global impact. Significance There is a large discrepancy between the US Federal Reserve (Fed)'s estimates for interest rates at end-2016 and the expectations of bond investors. The latter are anticipating less tightening than the 100-basis-point (bp) rise in the Federal Funds rate the Fed has pencilled in for this year. Despite a successful rates 'lift-off' on December 16, the Fed faces many challenges in raising rates in the face of mounting stress in credit markets, disinflationary pressures from the plunge in commodity prices and a contraction manufacturing. Impacts While the Fed will tighten policy, other central banks, including the ECB, will provide further stimulus, accentuating policy divergence. Investors will price in a more hawkish Fed if US inflation accelerates faster than expected, potentially leading to a sell-off. Concerns about China's economy and the commodity prices slump will also shape investor sentiment.


Subject The macroeconomic outlook for China. Significance Despite fears of a slowdown, China has kept up GDP growth of 6.8% year-on-year for three successive quarters. However, key measures of economic activity have weakened, and tensions are escalating with the United States over trade and technology. Impacts A swathe of new financial regulations and high-profile arrests will likely continue in 2018. Negotiations are likely to alleviate the immediate pressure from Washington, but underlying concerns over the tech sector will continue. A recently announced sweeping government reorganisation will be implemented, helping to tackle financial and environmental risks.


Significance GDP is likely to have contracted even more sharply in the second quarter, when the lockdown was at its height. The reopening of China’s economy, about two months ahead of Japan’s, suggests that consumers will be slow to resume old patterns. Impacts International demand and supply will be dampened even if Japan is quick to recover domestically; exports will lag a domestic recovery. Government support of small business and individuals with lost income will be key to recovery. Japan’s ‘cluster-based’ approach that tracks infection sources and isolates high-transmissibility cases appears to have worked.


Headline CHINA: Economy looks set to meet 6% target this year


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