China does not seem to be as insulated from the world economic crisis
as has been advertised. It's too soon to tell, of course, if my
speculation about the fate of the Chinese CP will work out...

The New York Times / December 11, 2008

Unexpected Drop in China's Imports and Exports
By ANDREW JACOBS and DAVID BARBOZA

BEIJING — Chinese exports registered their largest drop in nearly a
decade last month, suggesting that the global recession could be far
worse than many economists had previously predicted.

According to statistics released by the Chinese government Wednesday,
exports fell 2.2 percent from November 2007 to November 2008 — the
largest year-over-year monthly decline since April 1999.

Even at a time of increasingly dour economic news, the Chinese trade
numbers stunned many economists. They struck an ominous note for
China, where labor unrest has increased markedly as the economy has
slowed in the last month.

Many analysts had anticipated that the monthly trade figures would
show China's export machine slowing along with the global economy, but
few had expected it to slip into reverse. In October, exports surged
19.2 percent year-over-year.

"We were expecting a slowdown, but the magnitude is a bit shocking,"
said Wang Tao, an analyst at UBS Securities.

Most worrisome, China's economic dynamism of the last 20 years has
been powered by the twin engines of exports and foreign investment.
But in other sobering news, the government said that direct foreign
investment fell 36.5 percent from a year earlier in November.

In recent months, evaporating export demand had already forced
thousands of factories to close in the Pearl River Delta of Southern
China. Tens of thousands of jobs have disappeared, leading to protests
by unemployed workers demanding back pay.

Late last month, President Hu Jintao warned that the global financial
crisis was threatening to undermine three decades of head-spinning
expansion. "China is under growing tension from its large population,
limited resources and environmental problems, and needs faster reform
of its economic growth pattern to achieve sustainable development," he
said in a speech published in the Communist Party newspaper, People's
Daily.

Analysts say the sharp export slowdown could make it more difficult
for Beijing to stimulate the economy, and could lead to the closure of
more factories in coastal areas.

China's slowing exports will also be another sharp blow to global
growth. Together the trade figures strongly suggest that China will
not be a savior to the global economy, taking up the slack from the
slumping United States, Europe and Japan, as some had hoped. Indeed,
when combined with further signs of a slowing economy in Japan, the
picture of Asia, once the fastest-growing continent, becomes one of
spreading economic gloom.

Slowing exports will put added pressure on the Chinese government.
Already the stock market and real estate markets have plummeted,
industrial production is in decline and thousands of factories are
being closed.

Just last month, officials in Beijing announced a $586 billion
stimulus package. In recent weeks, the government has also slashed
interest rates, cut taxes on stock trades and announced other measures
aimed at lifting domestic consumption, in the hopes that it will
replace falling exports.

Imports to China also plunged sharply last month, falling 17.9 percent
and widening China's trade surplus to a record $40 billion, from $35.2
billion in October.

After the trade figures were released, China National Radio reported
that the government was vowing to expand spending and cut taxes
further next year in an effort to spur job creation and bolster
agriculture, social security, education and small and medium-size
enterprises.

Beijing will also seek to ensure "healthy and stable" growth of the
nation's property markets, which have slowed greatly in recent months.

But with leaks springing up all over China's economy, it is unclear
where the government can hold back economic, and potentially
political, upheaval.

The government's decision in recent weeks to allow the Chinese
currency, the yuan, to fall against the dollar after a long period of
appreciation seems to be a signal that the government is moving to
shore up its exporters, by making their goods cheaper and, therefore,
more competitive.

That — as well as China's increasing trade imbalance — could signal
greater tension ahead with the United States. In the one piece of
seemingly positive news, China's producer price index, a measure of
inflation at the factory level, fell to its lowest rate in two years,
according to the government. That figure — 2 percent in November —
rose 6.6 percent in October. In August, when that number hit 10.1
percent, the government was focused on stemming the threat of
inflation and moderating China's breakneck growth.

In just four months, the situation has changed startlingly. And lower
imports suggest falling demand and greater consumer and business fear.

Exports, meanwhile, are a mainstay of China's economy; by one measure
they make up 40 percent of gross domestic product. While some experts
dispute that figure and question other official economic statistics
from Beijing, analysts say the slumping demand for Chinese goods is
likely to pull down the nation's growth rate, which was 9 percent in
the third quarter, close to or even below the 7 percent figure that
many Chinese economists contend is the minimum for maintaining social
stability.

Qu Hongbin, the chief China economist at HSBC, said he expected things
to get worse in the coming months as the global recession further saps
the demand for Chinese goods. He said exports could fall as much as 19
percent in the first quarter of 2009.

"Combined with cooling property markets, this points to the rising
risk of a hard landing," he said in a statement. "It's official: as
the world's workshop, China will suffer as the global downturn
deepens."

Since it joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, China's exports
have quadrupled, helping transform it into the world's fourth largest
economy.

In a survey of more than a dozen analysts last month, no one predicted
that imports would decline. The drop in exports stretched across all
major trade commodities with steel leading the downward spiral.

Exports to all of China's trading partners suffered, with those to the
United States down 6.1 percent. In October, they were up 12.4 percent.

Andrew Jacobs reported from Beijing and David Barboza from Shanghai.

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to