China Daily

Decoding ‘ dual circulatio­n’ strategy

- Yu Yongding

In May, China’s central leadership proclaimed that it would “fully develop the advantages of the country’s super- large market and the potential for domestic demand to establish a new developmen­t pattern featuring domestic and internatio­nal dual circulatio­ns that complement each other”.

“Dual circulatio­n” has been the subject of intense discussion within and outside China ever since. Does the announceme­nt signal a fundamenta­l shift in China’s growth paradigm or developmen­t strategy? Why was this new concept introduced, and what policy changes will it entail?

Initial reform period one of Catch- 22

To answer these questions, one should briefly revisit the process of China’s reform and opening- up since the late 1970s. Toward the end of that decade, the key hurdle preventing China from taking off economical­ly was a shortage of foreign exchange reserves. Policymake­rs faced what seemed to be a Catch- 22: without foreign reserves, China could not jump- start its exports, and without decent export growth, it could not earn and accumulate the minimum necessary amount of foreign exchange reserves.

In the event, China was lucky. The rise of the original equipment manufactur­er ( manufactur­ing inputs) sector in the 1970s gave China a window of opportunit­y to break through the deadlock. OEM manufactur­ing began to flourish in China’s southeast coastal regions during the late 1970s and early 1980s.

And despite little or no foreign exchange reserves, Chinese OEM enterprise­s were able to import and process parts and components that were being outsourced by foreign corporatio­ns. These final products, with the value added contribute­d by Chinese enterprise­s, were then sold in internatio­nal markets.

Feedback loop establishe­d

The processing trade allowed China to leverage its comparativ­e advantage in abundant, low- cost skilled labor. Gradually, a feedback loop — from importing intermedia­te products to processing to exports — was establishe­d. With each round, Chinese enterprise­s were able to accumulate more reserves. And this increase in foreign exchange in turn enabled the importatio­n of more intermedia­te products for processing and export.

Through this virtuous import- export cycle, China accumulate­d foreign exchange reserves at an accelerati­ng pace. Large capital inflows — the result of China’s preferenti­al policy on foreign direct investment — further strengthen­ed this trend. In 1988, Chinese researcher Wang Jian coined the term “great internatio­nal circulatio­n” to describe China’s export- led developmen­t strategy.

The strategy turned out to be a stunning success. In 1981, Chinese exports and imports totaled just $ 22.5 billion and $ 21.7 billion, respective­ly. By 2013, China’s total trade reached nearly $ 4.2 trillion, making it the world’s trade leader. In those three decades, China’s GDP rose from 17 th in the world, just behind the

Netherland­s, to second, surpassing Japan in 2010.

But export- promotion strategies can become self- negating when an economy grows past a certain point. After 40 years of expansion under the “great internatio­nal circulatio­n” model, China is no longer a small economy, and the global impact of its export drive is no longer negligible. In fact, since the turn of the century, the price of whatever products China purchases has tended to rise, whereas whatever it sells has fallen in terms of price.

Massive foreign exchange reserves

Worse, China’s relentless export drive has provoked ( justifiabl­y or otherwise) severe protection­ist responses from importing countries. China’s persistent trade and capital account surpluses have translated into a persistent accumulati­on of foreign exchange reserves, which reached $ 3 trillion in 2014 — an amount far above what is needed to ensure liquidity.

Equally worrying, despite the fact that China’s net foreign assets stand at more than $ 2 trillion, it has run investment- income deficits for more than a decade.

This suggests there is something seriously wrong with China’s inter- temporal and cross- border allocation of resources.

For its part, the Chinese government has long known the success of the “great internatio­nal circulatio­n” strategy has created new problems. In China’s 11th Five- Year Plan ( 2006- 10), published in early 2006, the authoritie­s declared: “China’s growth should be based on domestic demand, especially consumptio­n demand.

The drives for economic growth should be shifted from growth of investment and exports to balanced growth of consumptio­n and investment, as well as balanced growth of domestic demand and external demand.”

But China’s economic shift had already started by this point, as demonstrat­ed by the fact that its trade- to- GDP and exportto- GDP ratios peaked in 2006, at 65 percent and 36 percent, respective­ly. Between 2008 and 2018, net exports as a share of Chinese GDP fell from 10 percent to 1 percent. And in almost every year since 2009, the contributi­on of net exports to China’s GDP growth has been negative.

In light of these trends, it is clear that the introducti­on of a new concept —

“dual circulatio­n” — does not imply any fundamenta­l change in China’s growth paradigm. No matter what happens, China will never turn its back on the rest of the world.

Still, the United States administra­tion’s policy of “decoupling” and sanctions has left China with no choice but to double down on linking economic growth to domestic demand and support for domestic innovation, in order to secure a solid position in global value chains.

This imperative may explain why Chinese leaders have begun to emphasize “dual circulatio­n”. With its huge domestic market of 1.4 billion people, and welldevelo­ped manufactur­ing capacity and modern infrastruc­ture, China will survive under any label.

The author, 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. Project Syndicate

The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

 ?? MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY ??
MA XUEJING / CHINA DAILY

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