The New Zealand Herald

Slowing China not all bad news

NZ’s role as exporter of high quality food to Asian powerhouse still promising: Economist

- Liam Dann

Trade war tensions with the US have sparked concerns that China’s economy is slowing with serious repercussi­ons for New Zealand and Australia.

China’s economy was already grappling with tighter financial regulation hitting infrastruc­ture investment and US interest rates lifting the cost of debt, HSBC chief economist for Asia Fred Neumann told The Economy Hub.

China’s sharemarke­ts have been some of the worst performers in the world this year.

“You have two drivers of the slowdown, the external side and infrastruc­ture demand,” Neumann said.

If the trade war with the US escalates with further tariffs it will add more pressure and could mean China misses its GDP growth target of 6.8 per cent.

But Hong Kong-based Neumann, who was in New Zealand last week, said he believes the growth of China’s domestic economy will provide a buffer from trade fallout – and that’s good news for

New Zealand exporters.

Beijing had already started making moves to stimulate its economy and had plenty of capacity to do more, he said.

Last week the People’s Bank of China eased lending restrictio­ns on the banking sector and the Government announced tax cuts and new infrastruc­ture projects.

Neumann said he believed some commentary had overplayed China’s vulnerabil­ity to US tariffs.

“The China economy is actually quite closed, it’s a continenta­l economy. The share of GDP and exports going to the US is only about 2 per cent at most, half what it was a decade ago” he said.

“China’s dependence on the US market has declined and is now lower than Japan’s.”

The tariffs would still have an impact but even if they were imposed on all US exports (as US President Donald Trump as threatened) it would not be catastroph­ic. “If you put it all in probably these tariffs would decrease growth by 0.3 or 0.4 percentage points. So instead of growing 6.8 [per cent] the economy might grow 6.3, 6.4 or 6.5. It’s not the end of the world.” As part of a concerted policy push over the past decade China had rebalanced the economy “quite successful­ly” from external demand to domestic demand, Neumann said. “Now the challenge is to move from investment to consumptio­n and that’s still underway so even though consumptio­n has improved investment still plays a large role.” In fact you could make the case that rising US interest rates still represente­d more of a challenge to China’s economy than the trade war, he said.

“Asia has built up a lot of debt in the last couple of years, not just China.”

So they did have to be careful not to inject too much more liquidity at a time when rates were rising.

Meanwhile, New Zealand’s role as a key exporter of high quality food to China remained promising, he said.

“There are signs of investment slowing but we don’t detect a slowdown in consumptio­n.

“The size of the middle-class is getting larger and larger, people have more discretion­ary spending. They like to spend it on higher quality foods and that’s where New Zealand comes in, it’s got the right product mix.”

 ?? Photo / AP ?? China’s sharemarke­ts have hardly been bullish this year.
Photo / AP China’s sharemarke­ts have hardly been bullish this year.
 ??  ?? HSBC chief economist for Asia Fred Neumann.
HSBC chief economist for Asia Fred Neumann.

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