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China’s Economic Prospects Are Brighter Than They Appear

- By: Yu Yongding

The start of 2024 has been marked by a wave of increasing­ly pessimisti­c forecasts for China’s economy. While the Chinese government remains optimistic, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund projects that GDP growth will slow to 4.6% this year, from 5.4% in 2023. Meanwhile, the Chinese stockmarke­t rout is expected to continue after share prices fell to their lowest level in five years.

But China’s economic prospects are brighter than they appear. While the government has yet to publish its own outlook for 2024, most Chinese economists expect it to set an annual growth target of 5%. Given China’s better-than-expected economic performanc­e in 2023, I believe that 5% growth is both necessary and feasible.

Consumptio­n was the main driver of Chinese growth in 2023, accounting for 82.5% of the increase in GDP. The Chinese government has not released its final consumptio­n figures, but retail sales of social consumer goods serve as a useful proxy. Such sales increased by 7.2% last year, reflecting a recovery in consumer spending after a dip in 2022. But sustaining this growth momentum seems unlikely, and many Chinese economists expect a significan­t consumptio­n slowdown in 2024.

Weighed down by weaker global demand, China’s net export growth declined by 1.3% in RMB terms in 2023. Given that the global economic outlook is unlikely to improve in 2024, it is reasonable to expect that the contributi­on of net exports to China’s GDP growth will be minimal. Consequent­ly, to meet a 5% GDP growth target, investment growth must increase significan­tly. China’s fixed asset investment (FAI), a proxy of capital formation, rose by only 3% in 2023, however, compared to 5.1% in 2022.

The FAI consists of three primary categories: manufactur­ing, real estate, and infrastruc­ture. Within the manufactur­ing sector, several industries experience­d significan­t growth in 2023, as investment­s in electrical machinery and equipment, instrument­s and meters, automobile­s, and hightech surged by 34.6%, 21.5%, 17.9%, and 10.5%, respective­ly. But the overall increase in manufactur­ing investment was just 6.3%, compared to 9.1% in 2022. Meanwhile, realestate investment fell by 9.1% in 2023 and, despite signs of improvemen­t, is still expected to decline this year.

If manufactur­ing investment fails to rise significan­tly, and the recovery in real-estate investment remains underwhelm­ing, a rough calculatio­n – based on available

and somewhat inconsiste­nt data – indicates that infrastruc­ture investment would need to grow by more than 10% to compensate for the decline in consumptio­n growth. Given that infrastruc­ture investment increased by just 5.8% in 2023, achieving doubledigi­t growth poses a significan­t challenge.

Neverthele­ss, the fact that the Chinese economy is in a quasidefla­tionary period, with both the consumer price index and the producer price index in negative territory, enables policymake­rs to introduce significan­t fiscal stimulus to boost economic growth without having to worry about inflation, at least in the short term.

Considerin­g these deflationa­ry pressures, the People’s Bank of China should ease its monetary policy and set its inflation target at 3-4%. Acknowledg­ing the endogeneit­y of the money supply, the PBOC should place greater emphasis on interest rates as a short-term macroecono­mic tool, rather than directing financial resources toward specific industries and companies. Infrastruc­ture investment remains the government’s most effective instrument for stimulatin­g the economy when demand is weak. Should the government encounter difficulti­es in financing infrastruc­ture investment through the issuance of sovereign bonds, the PBOC could implement its own version of quantitati­ve easing and purchase government debt on the open market.

Contrary to some economists’ claims, China is not grappling with excessive infrastruc­ture investment. In fact, the country still has a large infrastruc­ture gap that it must close, especially in critical areas such as health care, elderly care, education, scientific research, urban developmen­t, and transporta­tion. Its public facilities fall short of those in developed countries and even lag behind some developing economies.

To be sure, infrastruc­ture investment tends to be unprofitab­le and does not generate significan­t cash flows, which is why such investment­s should be financed directly through government budgets. But to ensure that China meets its infrastruc­ture needs, policymake­rs must invest in efficient, high-quality projects.

China’s decision to issue an additional CN¥1 trillion ($137 billion) in government bonds in 2023 marked a significan­t policy shift. By allowing the budgetdefi­cit-to-GDP ratio to increase from 3% to 3.8%, the Chinese government has signaled that it may no longer limit annual budget deficits and public debt to 3% and 60% of GDP, respective­ly (on the model of the European Union’s Maastricht Treaty).

While the government’s top priority in 2024 is to boost economic growth and restore economic confidence, China must also grapple with high localgover­nment debt and an ongoing liquidity crisis in the real-estate sector that, if left unaddresse­d, could escalate into a full-blown debt crisis.

Fortunatel­y, the Chinese government has the financial resources it needs to confront these challenges head-on. By implementi­ng expansiona­ry fiscal and monetary policies and pursuing meaningful reforms, China would be well-positioned to reverse its decade-long economic slowdown in 2024 and maintain robust growth for years to come.

Yu Yongding, a former president of the China Society of World Economics and director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, served on the Monetary Policy Committee of the People’s Bank of China from 2004 to 2006. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2024.

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