Times of Oman

Misreading the strength of China

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STEPHEN S. ROACH

US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has underestim­ated China’s resilience and strategic resolve. With the Chinese economy slowing, the US believes that China is hurting and desperate for an end to the trade war.

But with ample policy space to address the current slowdown, China’s leadership has no need to abandon its longer-term strategy. While a cosmetic deal focused on bilateral trade appears to be in the offing, the sharp contrast between the two economies’ fundamenta­l underpinni­ngs points to a very different verdict regarding who has the upper hand.

Yes, the Chinese economy has weakened significan­tly in the past few months. But, contrary to US perception­s that this is due to its successful tariff strategy, China’s downturn has been largely self-inflicted.

It was initially brought on by a deleveragi­ng campaign aimed at neutralizi­ng the mounting risks of debt-intensive economic growth. To their credit, Chinese policymake­rs have moved aggressive­ly to avoid the dreaded Japan syndrome – not just a debt overhang, but also a profusion of zombie companies and related productivi­ty challenges.

Largely as a result of this effort, credit growth has moderated from around 16 per cent at the start of 2016 to about 10.5% in late 2018.

This has had marked repercussi­ons for China’s once-powerful investment engine, the largest component of the economy, which has slowed from 20% growth in late 2013 to about 6 per cent in late 2018.

Meanwhile, the effects of US tariffs are only just starting to bite. While exports to the US fell by about 3 per cent year-on-year in December 2018 and January 2019, shipments to the rest of the world have continued to expand, owing largely to resilience in emerging markets, especially Asia.

To the extent that exports may have been front-loaded ahead of both the Lunar New Year holiday and potential further increases in US tariffs, some fallback can be expected. While that could temper near-term prospects, it is hard to pin the slowdown of the past few months on exports.

To hedge its risks, China has been quick to exploit its intrinsic advantage: much greater policy flexibilit­y than Western economies, which have largely hit their limits on fiscal and monetary stimulus. Cutting reserve requiremen­ts five times in the past year has led to higher bank lending and a pick-up in credit growth in early 2019, which should support an improvemen­t in overall economic activity by midyear.

By contrast, the US economy is more of a short-term momentum story. Thanks to the outsize tax cuts of late 2017, economic growth picked up to about 3 per cent in 2018, nearly one percentage point faster than the anemic 2.2 per cent pace of the prior eight years. But with fiscal stimulus fading, GDP growth should follow suit – consistent with the Congressio­nal Budget Office’s latest projection of just a 2.3 per cent rise in 2019.

Risks of an even weaker outcome are mounting. The rebound in US equity prices in early 2019 has not offset the sharp decline in late 2018, which took a heavy toll on household wealth and consumer confidence, prompting an outsize decline in retail sales in December.

With jobless claims starting to inch higher, the housing sector already weak, the global economy on increasing­ly shaky ground, and the Federal Reserve having limited ammunition, the US economy’s resilience looks increasing­ly tenuous.

The likelihood of contrastin­g economic growth trajectori­es – a policy-induced improvemen­t in China and a policy-constraine­d slowdown in the US – reinforces a more serious mismatch of longer-term fundamenta­ls. China’s domestic saving rate in 2018, at 45 per cent of GDP, was nearly two and a half times the US rate of 18.7 per cent. Although China’s saving rate has fallen from its 2008 peak of 52 per cent, as consumer-led rebalancin­g has prompted a shift from surplus saving to saving absorption, it still has a cushion that the US would die for.

Moreover, fully 85 per cent of America’s gross saving goes toward replacemen­t of obsolete and worn-out capital stock. Adjusting for depreciati­on, the US had a net national saving rate of just 3 per cent in 2018 – less than half the 6.3 per cent average in the final three decades of the twentieth century and even further below the net saving position of China, where the capital stock is considerab­ly newer and in less need of replacemen­t.

These saving disparitie­s underscore a critical difference in the investment underpinni­ngs of both economies’ growth potential. China’s investment was 44 per cent of its GDP in 2018, more than double the 21 per cent share in the US.

And, given America’s aging capital stock, the disparity between the capacity-enhancing net investment positions of the two economies is even wider.

 ?? - Reuters file photo ?? SLUGGISH: An employee counts Chinese yuan banknotes at a bank in Hefei, Anhui province. Chinese economy has weakened significan­tly in the past few months.
- Reuters file photo SLUGGISH: An employee counts Chinese yuan banknotes at a bank in Hefei, Anhui province. Chinese economy has weakened significan­tly in the past few months.

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