China Daily

Shift in focus to attain quality growth

- Andrew Sheng and Xiao Geng

Shifting toward “quality growth” is now at the top of the country’s policy agenda. Government­s at all levels nationwide now have a quiet but resolute commitment to fostering a new growth model that corrects the distortion­s created by decades of double-digit growth — including corruption, pollution, rising inequality and other structural imbalances.

Over most of the last 40 years, China focused on rapid landbased developmen­t, driven by local initiative­s aimed at attracting infrastruc­ture investment, human resources and tax revenues. The creation of special economic zones, industrial parks, and free-trade zones facilitate­d such developmen­t, as they benefited from the large pool of cheap labor migrating from rural areas.

Throughout this process, China used GDP growth as its main measure of success. This enabled the establishm­ent of well-defined goals and incentives for local officials as they competed with one another. But it also caused serious problems — such as environmen­tal damage, inequality, excessive debts, overcapaci­ty and corruption.

Today, China’s authoritie­s are looking at a broader range of measures at the local and national levels that cover not just growth, but also quality of life. The vision behind this shift was articulate­d at the Communist Party of China’s 19th National Congress last October, when General Secretary Xi Jinping stressed 14 policy areas critical to the developmen­t of “socialism with Chinese characteri­stics”.

Among those imperative­s was “adopting a new vision for developmen­t”, which “ensures and improves living standards”. This vision should be underpinne­d by a commitment to a “people-centered approach” and “harmony between humans and nature”. Xi also emphasized strong governance, specifical­ly “ensuring Party leadership over all work”, “ensuring every dimension of governance is law-based,” and “exercising full and rigorous governance over the Party.”

The motivation behind the shift in China’s developmen­t focus is no mystery. China is now the world’s second-largest economy and accounts for nearly half of global growth. It has now largely caught up with the advanced countries in terms of infrastruc­ture, trade, investment and industrial­ization. Continuing to strengthen its position on the world stage is now a matter of meeting and even exceeding global standards in areas ranging from sustainabi­lity to good governance.

Of course, addressing the challenges China faces will require plenty of trial and error — much like that which enabled its past developmen­t — not to mention acceptance of some economic casualties. For example, the decline of the industrial areas in Northeast China and the rise of modern, globally competitiv­e manufactur­ing clusters in the Pearl and Yangtze River Deltas in Southeast China are two sides of the same coin. Market competitio­n in China created both winners and losers, with the winners in the southeast taking entreprene­urs, talent and other resources from the losers in the northeast.

Managing the transforma­tion of China’s regional economies while preserving social stability will demand a careful balance between the old growth strategy exemplifie­d by the losers and their heavy reliance on Stateowned enterprise­s and public investment, and the new, more human- and capital-oriented approach being developed by the winners. In the process, China will need to take into account local factors, such as population trends, natural resources and the appeal of various regions to middle-income domestic tourists.

This rebalancin­g will require the central government to help relieve the debt burdens resulting from bankrupt projects in the losing regions, much like it did in the 1990s, when it wrote off the losses that SOEs incurred during the Asian financial crisis. This does not mean that China should rescue outdated and unprofitab­le local industries. Rather, it means preventing the sunk costs of China’s past growth model from leaving entire regions trapped in lowquality growth and developmen­t, by enabling local people to develop innovative start-ups, while investing in projects that create new income opportunit­ies.

Beyond supply-side structural adjustment­s, China must ensure that its new growth strategy addresses “last mile” demand-side problems of urban and human developmen­t, including traffic jams, infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s, housing shortages, underdevel­oped waste-management services, and inadequate education and healthcare. As it stands, resolving these micro-level issues — critical to people’s well-being — is among the weakest areas of China’s complex macroecono­mic and social reform plans.

China has all the physical, financial and social resources it needs to redress these problems, which in fact amount to major investment opportunit­ies for both the public and private sectors. But, to succeed, any strategy must not only account for local feedback about what is achievable under local conditions; it must also allow for local ownership of solutions, including design and implementa­tion.

In any case, China’s leaders have demonstrat­ed a willingnes­s and ability to look at the big picture, accepting lower rates of GDP growth as they rebalance the country’s developmen­t model and pursue improvemen­ts in quality of life. It will not be easy to realize the vision of “people-centered developmen­t” that Xi announced last October. But China is on the right track.

Today, China’s authoritie­s are looking at a broader range of measures at the local and national levels that cover not just growth, but also quality of life.

Andrew Sheng is distinguis­hed fellow at the Asia Global Institute at the University of Hong Kong and a member of the UNEP Advisory Council on Sustainabl­e Finance. Xiao Geng is president of the Hong Kong Institutio­n for Internatio­nal Finance and a professor at the University of Hong Kong. Project Syndicate

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