The current turmoil in the Chinese economy and financial markets is shaking
security markets globally as the yuan nosedived in the first week of this
year and Chinese equities lost $1.1 trillion. What a contrast to the 13.3%
compound annual growth from 1992 through 2007 *(Chart 1*) that propelled
China’s GDP from 9% of America’s total to 59% last year *(Chart 2)! *So
China moved ahead of Japan in 2009 to become the world’s second-largest
economy as hundreds of millions of Chinese rose from poverty.

Reveling in Success

The Chinese revel in that success. They view themselves as the world’s
superior society, and have chafed at being under European thumbs in the
1800s and Japanese hegemony in the last century. For years, the Chinese
have lusted to be big players on the global stage, and have her yuan
currency recognized by the International Monetary Fund as a reserve
currency, right up there with the dollar, euro, yen and sterling. It
finally was late last year.

They also have enjoyed the widespread conviction in the West that, with
recent sluggish growth in North America and Europe, China was inheriting
the mantle of global economic leadership. Indeed, many observers in and out
of China believed that growth there would spill over to the West and spur
gains in North America and Europe.
Leadership Direction

In fact, however, economic leadership has been the reverse. Like virtually
all developing economies, China’s has been driven by exports that directly
or indirectly are sold to North America and Europe. And those imports by
the West are fundamentally curtailed by sluggish overall economic growth,
the result of deleveraging, the working off of excess debt built up in the
exuberant 1980s and 1990s. Annual Chinese export growth dropped from 20% to
30% in the 2000s to a 7% decline last November from a year earlier *(Chart
3).*

In the U.S., real GDP growth has averaged only 2.2% since the recovery
commenced in mid-2009, about half the rebound rate you’d expect after the
deepest recession since the 1930s. Similarly, the eurozone has limped along
at a 0.7% rate with another recession in 2011-2013 following the 2007-2009
global Great Recession while Japan’s real GDP has averaged 0.9% with three
more declines of a least two consecutive quarters since 2009.
Globalization

Also, globalization the transfer of manufacturing and other production from
the West to China and other emerging economies is largely completed,
curbing that source of emerging economy advance. U.S. factory output as a
share of GDP skidded from 17% in 1997 to 12% in 2009, but then leveled off
when just about all the production that could be moved overseas was
offshored *(Chart 4).*

The resulting weakness in the Chinese economy, however, was masked until
recently by massive housing, capital spending and infrastructure
investment. But the residues are excess capacity, ghost cities and total
corporate and government debt that leaped from 160% in 2004 to 232% in
2014. Also, China’s huge total economic size covered up its
still-underdeveloped status. Even with the explosive growth in the past
several decades, Chinese GDP per capita in 2014 was $7,590, or just 14% of
America’s *(Chart 5).*

Chinese leaders want to shift to a domestic-led economy driven by consumer
spending and services, but whenever overall growth flags, they resort to
the same old, same old infrastructure spending. So the result is even more
excess capacity and more political and economic power for the inefficient
State-Owned Enterprises. And officials merge them rather than allow them to
fail. At the same time, private firms are starved for capital.

These actions not only reveal Beijing’s distrust of free markets but also
its reluctance to address the trade-off between heavy industry pollution
generation and economic growth. Meanwhile, consumer spending in China is
almost off the chart compared to G-7 and even BRIC economies. It’s 34% of
GDP in China vs. 59% in India, 60% in Italy and 68% in the U.S. *(Chart 6).*

Financial Pygmy

China is a giant in global manufacturing, but an amateurish pygmy on the
worldwide financial stage. That was evident last summer when the government
clumsily intervened to arrest the one-third drop in Chinese stocks after
hyping equities as the way to recapitalize debt-laden SOEs *(Chart 7).*

Margin selling was prohibited, brokers and state-owned enterprises ordered
to buy stocks and trading halted as share prices plummeted. More recently,
institutions are only allowed to sell 1% of their stock positions, and then
after three weeks notice. As scared investors traded yuan for dollars to
ship overseas *(Chart 8),* Chinese foreign currency reserves fell $600
billion since last August to $3.3 trillion at year’s end. The removal of
those yuan also shrinks the domestic money supply.

Then followed currency devaluation as China attempts to spur exports to
revive economic growth, which is probably running only half the official
6.9% rate *(Chart 1). *Additional devaluation is likely but more subtly to
avoid further massive flight from the yuan *(Chart 8).* Export subsidies,
internal devaluation through wage and price cuts, and a shift from the
dollar to a trade-weighted basket of currencies are all active
possibilities. Notice *(Chart 9)* that since 2005, that the yuan has risen
26% vs. the dollar, but 40% against the trade weighted basket of
currencies. This leaves China at a 14% currency disadvantage compared with
her trading partners.

Chinese officials say they want to move toward free markets but still
insist on top-down control a very difficult combination to manage.
Following the market turmoil touched off by the 1.9% yuan devaluation last
August 11, the central bank the People’s Bank of China said it would set
the yuan's daily fix, around which it is allowed to fluctuate 2%, in line
with the previous day's closing level. That would give markets more sway
over its value than the previous administered rates.

But with this new mechanism, official attempts to weaken the yuan to spur
exports and economic growth in early January resulted in a stampede out of
the currency. So the PBOC abandoned that step toward a free market for the
yuan and ordered the government-controlled large banks to buy yuan to
support the currency. The daily currency fix is back to being a black box.
This reality was driven home by the recent statement by a senior Chinese
economic official that China has plenty of ammunition to defeat attacks on
her currency. "Attempts to sell short the yuan will not succeed," he said.
"The expectations of markets can be changed." Translation: We have ways!

Recently, China security regulators instituted a circuit-breaker system to
protect investors from massive sell-offs by suspending trading after
meaningful market losses. But reflecting disdain for stocks inherent
volatility, they set the collar too narrow, at only 7%.

So it backfired after the limit was hit twice in the system’s first four
days and was suspended on January 7, only 29 minutes into the trading day.
Skittish retail investors that dominate the Chinese market dumped stocks in
anticipation of an early market closing, and precipitated their
expectation. That was the shortest trading day in the Chinese stock
market’s 25 years.
Not Dead

China won’t shrivel up and die, but will be a much less important actor on
the global stage, as she shifts her orientation from commodity-munching
exports, housing and infrastructure to consumer spending and services. The
same was true of Japan starting in the early 1990s. Before that, many
Americans though they’d soon be working for Japanese companies or run out
of business by then. The Japanese were buying Iowa farmland, Pebble Beach
and Rockefeller Center with gay abandon. But at the end of the 1980s,
Japan’s stock market bubble collapsed *(Chart 10)* as did overblown house
prices *(Chart 11),* and the economy fell into the still-ongoing era of
tiny 1.1% real GDP growth and deflation *(Chart 12).*

Similarly, Chinese stocks went off the cliff last summer *(Chart 7)* and
residential housing activity has collapsed *(Chart 13).* And just as
Japan’s delay in cleaning up the busted zombie banks in the 1990s and 2000s
contributed to business malaise, China’s delay in restructuring the SOEs
will likely have similar repercussions.

Furthermore, China has yet to address the trade-off between pollution and
economic growth that Japan did earlier. We remember being in Tokyo in the
1980s when pollution was so thick that even on cloudless days, you still
couldn’t see the sun.

Another parallel that’s slowing economic growth, in both China and Japan,
is the declining work force. Population in Japan is actually falling *(Chart
14)* as the sub-replacement fertility rate combines with the longest G-7
life expectancy *(Chart 15).* When the effects of no legal immigration into
Japan are included, the proportion of the total population of working-age
is headed for the lowest level among major countries *(Chart 16).*

Old Before Rich

In China, the earlier one child per couple policy is slashing the number of
prime new labor force entrants, the 15-to-24-year-olds *(Chart 17),* while
the supply of rural labor to move to cities and man factories has run out.
Unlike Japan, however, China is getting old before it gets rich.

The earlier massive buying of foreign assets by Japan was aimed in part at
securing raw materials for her manufacturing juggernaut and markets for its
output. In retrospect, however, it was also due to a dearth of
growth-spurring investment opportunities at home. Ditto for China, which is
now buying foreign real estate and other assets in huge quantities.

We keep extensive files of newspaper clippings and other information to
help in writing our own reports. In the 1980s, the Japan files were
measured in feet but our China files took only an inch or two. Today, it’s
the reverse. Still, as shock-and-awe over China recedes in future years,
along with China’s significance on the world stage, we expect our files on
China to shrink back to Japan’s size.

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