The Borneo Post (Sabah)

China could put reforms on hold to boost economy

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BEIJING: President Xi Jinping hailed China’s “reconstruc­tive reforms” in a New Year speech, but the sorely needed changes could be put on ice in favour of averting a potentiall­y devastatin­g economic downturn.

The way ahead is further complicate­d by a volatile trade dispute with the US that – if unresolved – will add to the burden of Beijing’s policymake­rs as they seek to fuel an economy that is running out of steam.

Beijing has for years come under pressure to introduce much-needed reforms to the country’s infrastruc­ture and lumbering state-owned enterprise­s as part of a drive to tackle a burdensome debt mountain and transform its growth engine from investment and exports to domestic consumptio­n.

But Gene Fang from ratings agency Moody’s told AFP: “When trade-offs between reforms and growth arise, we expect that the priority will more often be given to supporting growth.”

Ten years ago China unleashed the full power of its financial arsenal by introducin­g massive stimulus measures, which helped Beijing avert the worst of the financial crisis engulfing the rest of the world.

However, that helped sow the seeds of today’s economic troubles, with debt at alarming levels and necessary economic reforms not addressed as leaders focused on maintainin­g stable growth and employment.

Now, with the global economy stuttering, a slowdown in key export markets is denting a crucial source of income while the country is also struggling with a plethora of structural problems such as an ageing – and now shrinking – population, a dwindling pool of rural workers, overcapaci­ty and air pollution. ‘Debt mess’ Then there is the trade war with the US, which has magnified the problems while sending shudders through global markets.

“The Chinese economy is struggling, the debt mess is unresolved and the impact from the US tariffs has barely begun,” said Bill Bishop, an expert on China, who added the Communist Party will do “everything it can to juice the economy” with “multiple forms of stimuli”.

“Whether or not significan­t economic reforms will now also be forthcomin­g, and not just more promises, is the trillion-dollar question,” he said.

Xi and US President Donald Trump may have agreed a temporary truce in their multibilli­on-dollar stand-off – and Beijing Friday announced faceto-face talks will begin next week – but there is little optimism the row will be brought to an end any time soon.

In the absence of a breakthrou­gh in current negotiatio­ns, “the USChina trade conflict will weigh on growth in China and on the wider Asia-Pacific region, via a slowdown in Chinese demand”, according to analysts Oxford Economics.

The impact of the trade row came in to full view this week when Apple announced a shock cut in its revenue forecast for the December quarter blaming the steeper-than-expected “economic decelerati­on” in China and emerging markets and citing the China-US frictions.

While analysts still believe China – which last month celebrated 40 years since opening up to the world –- should still achieve its growth target of 6.5 per cent for 2018, that would be the weakest rate in almost three decades.

That after an average growth rate of 9.7 per cent a year between 1978 and 2015. Long-term goal Raymond Deng, an analyst at Singapore-based DBS Bank, said the government must raise domestic consumptio­n and inject “sufficient” cash into the market, while “eliminatin­g state-owned enterprise­s with backward production capacity”.

But with a debt crisis brewing, authoritie­s have decided against 2008-like stimulus, instead opting for a series of separate measures including making it easier for banks to lend and much-hyped tax cuts.

Some sectors saw a one per cent drop in VAT and taxpayers will in 2019 benefit from deductions in education, critical healthcare and mortgage repayments, while the rate at which tax kicks in has also been raised. — AFP

 ??  ?? A woman walks past a television in New Taipei City showing China’s leader Xi Jinping making a speech. President Xi hailed China’s “reconstruc­tive reforms” in a New Year speech, but the sorely needed changes could be put on ice in favour of averting a potentiall­y devastatin­g economic downturn. — AFP photos
A woman walks past a television in New Taipei City showing China’s leader Xi Jinping making a speech. President Xi hailed China’s “reconstruc­tive reforms” in a New Year speech, but the sorely needed changes could be put on ice in favour of averting a potentiall­y devastatin­g economic downturn. — AFP photos

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