Chinese economists warn of the “biggest adjustment” in 30 years
By John Chan
12 September 2008

While last weekend’s bailout of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae received
plaudits from Wall Street, it was also warmly welcomed by the Chinese
government. Most immediately, Beijing was concerned about the tens of
billions of dollars in bonds that Chinese banks hold from the two
mortgage giants. At the same time, China’s manufacturers are desperate
for any sign that the US will emerge from the subprime crisis, which
has sapped consumer spending and therefore purchases of Chinese
exports.

Several leading economists in China have begun to warn of major
difficulties flowing from the economic slowdown in the US, Europe and
Japan. After the expansion of the economy on the basis of selling
cheap consumer goods to the US and other Western markets in the 1990s,
a sharp decline in demand could lead to mass unemployment and provoke
widespread social unrest.

In an interview with the First Financial Daily published on September
1, Li Xiangyang, deputy director of the World Economic and Political
Research Department of the official Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
(CASS), admitted that the subprime meltdown was a rude awakening for
Chinese economists, who had long understated the risk of major global
crises.

Li was referring to the fact that many Chinese economists adapted to
Western neo-liberal theories in the 1990s, believing that the global
recession in the 1970s and the Great Depression of 1929 were events of
the past. “This conception has been dominating China’s economic
circles for years,” Li said, adding that it had weakened an awareness
of the emerging global downturn.

Since the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) regime turned to the
capitalist market in 1978, the official Stalinist ideologues and
academics have all but dropped their “socialist” window dressing and
now openly serve the new capitalist elite. Dismissing the Marxist
theory of capitalist breakdown as “outdated,” they claim that world
capitalism has learned to regulate its contradictions and that the
economic depressions, social revolutions and imperialist wars of the
first half of the twentieth century will never return. Such arguments
are now looking seriously flawed.

Li admitted China was facing the “the most serious external shock in
the 30 years of reform and opening up”. China was a closed economy
throughout the mid-1970s period of world stagflation—a combination of
economic stagnation and high inflation. Its market reforms only began
in earnest in 1978. Even during the Asian financial crisis in 1997-98,
China escaped most of the impact because the developed economies in
North America and Europe were largely unaffected. China still had a
closed capital market, unlike today when hundreds of billions of
dollars in “hot money” or speculative capital has flooded into the
country. Li warned that it was now impossible for China to “decouple”
from the global economic crisis.

The restoration of capitalism in the former Soviet Union in 1991 and
China’s transformation into a vast sweatshop following the crushing of
protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989 provided a much-needed boost to
world capitalism. The low-cost goods made in China enabled US economic
policy makers to maintain a cheap credit policy without the fear of
inflationary pressures. Low interest rates formed the basis of the
housing bubbles and debt-driven consumption in the US over the past
decade, which in turn provided a huge market for Chinese goods.

Now this process is coming to an end. Li explained: “The subprime
crisis was actually a ‘correction’ to years of debt-driven consumption
in the US, marking the end of unsustainable economic growth based on
‘spending tomorrow’s income today’. However, the cost of this
‘correction’ was borne by the rest of the world. Within the US
economy, the ‘spend tomorrow’s income today’ debts of private
companies were socialised. The savers paid the bill for the lavish
spenders, through government interventions. Meanwhile, American debts
were globalised: global savers paid the bill for American consumers,
through inflation and devaluation of the dollar. This is the privilege
of being the holder of the world currency.”

The comments reflect a certain bitterness among the capitalist elite
in China, which now confronts declining global demand and rising
commodity prices, while the giants of US finance capital are being
bailed out. Li called for China to develop its own transnational
corporations, rather than simply remain an assembly line for Western
multinationals.

Rising debts and insolvencies

Andy Xie, a former chief Asia analyst for Morgan Stanley, also warned
in the financial magazine Caijing on September 1 that China was facing
its biggest challenge in three decades. He pointed out that for the
first time in 30 years, Europe, Japan and the US were contracting
simultaneously, creating enormous difficulties for Chinese exports. In
addition, a huge inflow of speculative capital had created unstable
asset bubbles in China. Many companies and local governments
confronted a crisis of insolvency if the bubbles burst.

More fundamentally, rising production costs were undermining the
entire basis of China’s economic expansion as a platform for cheap
manufacturing. Exports accounted for 40 percent of China’s gross
domestic product (GDP) and contributed 4 percent of the country’s
total annual growth. Xie said problems with exports could be traced
back to 2004, when global commodity prices started to rise. Rising
prices led to demands for wage increases. As a result, large numbers
of labour-intensive firms, which had always operated on thin profit
margins, had been pushed to the edge.

Xie pointed out that the sentiment among entrepreneurs was that things
would get better. As a result, firms kept their production plans and
attempted to maintain export growth over the past three years. Now,
with the danger of a downturn in major markets, many exporters faced
serious problems. Export corporations listed on the Hong Kong stock
market had seen their share values fall by 50-80 percent in the past
two years, raising fears of a collapse in the export industry.

Corporate debt had grown as manufacturers turned to real estate and
share markets, only to suffer more losses. So far this year, China’s
share markets had plunged by 59 percent, wiping out $US2.86 trillion
in value. Local governments, which were dependent on selling land
rights and taxing real estate transactions, were also heavily
indebted.

Xie predicted that non-performing loans would increase substantially
in the next 12 months as the property boom flattened out. “The problem
is very serious,” he warned. According to one official estimate, some
65,000 small and medium firms went bankrupt in the first half of this
year, throwing 20 million people out of work. Many employers simply
fled without paying wages to workers or debts to the banks.

Xie, a staunch advocate of the market, opposed any government
assistance for ailing enterprises. Instead, he called on the
government to prevent bankrupt businessmen from fleeing with their
assets and creating major difficulties for banks. “[T]he action of
local officials to spend money to rescue them is very stupid. The
money could be stolen. To protect China’s financial security, the most
effective policy is to ban heavily indebted entrepreneurs from leaving
China,” he wrote.

Xie’s solution to China’s problems is another round of economic
restructuring—as was carried out in the aftermath of the Asian
financial crisis a decade ago. At that time, Beijing implemented
sweeping privatisation of state enterprises and public housing, joined
the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and built a national highway
network. Tens of millions of jobs in the state sector were destroyed,
even as the costs of housing, education and health care skyrocketted
due to the lack of public funding. According to Xie, these draconian
“market reforms” laid the basis for the boom of the past 10 years.

Xie’s proposals to address the current crisis include developing
Chinese transnationals, investing more in infrastructure and further
deregulating the state-controlled financial system. Such a perspective
is in line with calls by many economists in recent years for China to
reduce its reliance on exports and expand the domestic market. But the
transformation of a cheap labour platform into a consumer-driven
economy inevitably confronts obstacles.

The domestic market

The Wall Street Journal on September 2 pointed to some of the
difficulties in expanding domestic consumption in China. Far from
increasing, consumption in China has declined as a proportion of GDP
from around 50 percent in the 1980s to just 37 percent. Fixed asset
investment accounts for 45 percent of the GDP, which has led to
massive overcapacity. “Behind China’s macroeconomic imbalances lies a
political calculation,” the newspaper explained. “With 10 million job
seekers migrating into urban areas every year, China had to provide
lots of jobs to avoid mass unemployment and social unrest. Because
consumer income and spending were so weak, the government felt it had
no choice but to pump up capital investment and exports.”

Huge vested interests oppose any shift to domestic consumption and
higher wages. For local officials, jobs are already becoming harder to
create. In the past decade, China has eliminated an estimated 20
million manufacturing jobs due to improvements in productivity. High
wages are the last thing that provincial and local governments want as
they confront growing competition for investment, not only within
China, but from Vietnam and India.

Other methods of putting money into the pockets of consumers also face
opposition. The government could lift interest rates on consumer
deposits, but businesses would oppose any increase in their loan
repayments. Further appreciation of the yuan would increase domestic
purchasing power for imported goods but at the expense of export
competitiveness. The government could reduce personal income tax but
if that meant increased corporate taxes, it would be resisted by the
powerful business elite.

A new labour law was introduced this year mandating employers to
provide pensions, social insurance contributions and other benefits
for workers. As is the case with other regulations in China, many
businesses simply flout the law and enforcement is weak. China could
increase domestic consumption by investing in public schools,
healthcare and unemployment compensation, so that workers and the
rural poor would not have to save in case of illness or job loss. But
as the Wall Street Journal explained: “These measures are opposed by
many local governments that often prefer to spend money on building
roads and bridges. That behavior may boost GDP more quickly, but it
also provides more opportunity for corruption and payoffs.”

So far, the economic slowdown has been gradual. But there are danger
signs. The Chinese finance ministry recorded a 13.8 percent annualised
growth in tax revenues in July—almost a fifth lower than the rates in
the same month last year and the first half of this year. The
announcement raised concerns that China has little room for
stimulatory policies such as tax cuts to compensate for falling growth
rates.

While it is still growing at around 10.4 percent, the Chinese economy
is riddled with internal contradictions that could rapidly produce an
economic, not to mention political and social, crisis should it be hit
with a major external shock. That is why Chinese economists are
nervously watching events in the US where a further financial meltdown
could not only cause huge losses for Beijing, which holds hundreds of
billions in US investments, but end the flood of foreign investment
that has sustained the so-called Chinese miracle.
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