Business Day

Why China will not rescue the US from next recession

- Daniel Moss ● Moss is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Asian economies. This column does not necessaril­y reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

US recession indicators are growing stronger and there is one bigger-thanusual reason why the world should be worried: China is not coming to the rescue this time.

In the past week alone, a gauge of US manufactur­ing unexpected­ly fell to its weakest reading in a decade and payrolls at private companies grew less than forecast. Economists are starting to wonder whether the US has approached so-called stall speed, the slowest pace of growth without careening into a recession. The IMF, meanwhile, will probably downgrade global growth estimates in October.

One of the engines that drove a global economic recovery after the past two downdrafts in the US — the relatively shallow one in 2001 and the catastroph­e that began in 2007 — was China. As the financial crisis grew, Beijing opened a floodgate of credit and cut interest rates, which stoked demand for everything from Australian coal to German cars.

We are unlikely to see anything like that this time. Beijing has shown little appetite for another round of huge fiscal stimulus as it atones for the profligacy of the past decade, which left a huge build-up of debt and fuelled asset bubbles.

While Chinese authoritie­s have been juicing the economy the past year, they have been very careful about how they go about it. Economists keep predicting cuts in the benchmark interest rate; but those have not been forthcomin­g, as my Bloomberg Opinion colleague Shuli Ren wrote recently.

The People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has preferred trims to lenders’ reserve requiremen­ts, as officials focus on the best way to channel credit to certain sectors of the business world. Open-slather easing, it is not.

That does not augur particular­ly well for the prospects of a global recovery. The financial crisis led to the world’s most consequent­ial central banks coordinati­ng rate cuts, with China’s participat­ion. Beijing’s involvemen­t made the country a serious player in the global monetary order.

How likely is it that the PBOC will happily sign off on something with the Federal Reserve (Fed) once again? With President Donald Trump sitting in the White House, not very. Then again, Trump has already likened Fed chair Jerome Powell to Chinese President Xi Jinping. Desperatio­n has been known to make odd bedfellows in pursuit of shared short-term goals.

The good news is that any step China does take will have ripple effects, given its sheer size. GDP is now about $14trillion, compared with barely more than $1-trillion in 2001 and about $4-trillion in 2007. Chinese firms continue to plough investment into neighbouri­ng countries and Beijing-funded lenders such as the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank may well step up to provide cash to struggling economies.

Let us keep things in perspectiv­e, though. China is now recording quarterly economic growth of about 6%, not the 15% notched in 2007 or the about 10% in 2001. The executives and politician­s who tripped over themselves to praise China’s model of developmen­t are noticeably quieter now.

Not every recession is like 2007’s, nor are they always accompanie­d by a financial collapse. The next slump, whenever it comes, will still be painful, so the US might want to start casting about for an enthusiast­ic partner. It is probably a mistake to expect that will be China this time around it is not only less willing, but less able.

BEIJING HAS SHOWN LITTLE APPETITE FOR ANOTHER ROUND OF FISCAL STIMULUS AS IT ATONES FOR THE PROFLIGACY OF THE PAST DECADE

 ?? /AFP ?? No friend: US President Donald Trump. It is unlikely that the Chinese central bank will sign off on a deal with the Federal Reserve this time with him sitting in the White House.
/AFP No friend: US President Donald Trump. It is unlikely that the Chinese central bank will sign off on a deal with the Federal Reserve this time with him sitting in the White House.

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