The Star Early Edition

Concerns show over Chinese growth

- William Pesek is a Bloomberg columnist William Pesek

OVER the weekend, China’s second rate move in three months made clear how concerned leaders in Beijing are about sliding growth. And Saturday’s quarter percentage-point cut is probably only the beginning.

As data on manufactur­ing, property and consumer prices take a dramatic turn towards contractio­n, there’s every reason to think China’s one-year deposit and lending rates – now 2.5 percent and 5.35 percent – could head towards zero, just as in neighbouri­ng Japan. After that, can quantitati­ve easing (QE) with Chinese characteri­stics be far off ? “QE would be one alternativ­e,” economist Louis Kuijs of Royal Bank of Scotland in Hong Kong, says.

As Kuijs points out, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has “already taken some small-scale QE-type measures last year in the form of direct lending”.

It has used short-term lending facilities to cash up the China Developmen­t Bank so that the nation’s so-called superbank can support local government­s and their countless infrastruc­ture vehicles. So far, though, the PBOC has done more “qualitativ­e easing” than QE. This phrase, widely attributed to Citigroup chief economist Willem Buiter, refers to how the PBOC is more concerned with the compositio­n of its balance sheet than the size.

It may be time to focus more on the latter. As downside risks accelerate, the national and regional government­s are under pressure to ramp up stimulus efforts. That will exacerbate the ticking time bomb that is local government debt.

While good numbers were notoriousl­y hard to come by, local authoritie­s’ borrowings might have already reached $4 trillion (R47 trillion), bigger than Germany’s economy, Mizuho Securities Asia said. Regional financing schemes are increasing the opacity of China’s already murky debt profile – and with diminishin­g returns.

Thanks to overlappin­g levels of overcapaci­ty, new borrowing will only put a floor under things, not power a sizable accelerati­on in gross domestic product. As Bank of Japan (BOJ) governor Haruhiko Kuroda has shown, supporting growth in a heavily indebted economy is better left to monetary policy.

Japanese innovation­s

By radically increasing China’s domestic liquidity, PBOC governor Zhou Xiaochuan will stabilise China’s price environmen­t without adding to national debt.

With both consumer and producer prices falling to a five-year low in January, China’s lending environmen­t was becoming more restrictiv­e, economist Wang Tao of UBS in Hong Kong said. Even after the PBOC’s November rate cut, she said, real rates had moved up by 100 basis points since the fourth quarter. That, Wang said, “means a tightening of monetary conditions, which stands in sharp contrast with softening real activity”.

By deploying its own monetary bazooka, the central bank could support growth and ease pressure on borrowers.

Zhou might also want to consider another of Kuroda’s unspoken innovation­s – the stealthy nationalis­ation of debt. This may seem like an odd suggestion: The BOJ is an independen­t central bank overseeing the economy of a democracy, while the PBOC is an arm of China’s Communist Party. But Kuroda has blurred the lines considerab­ly as he buys up more and more debt. Only his inner circle knows whether the IOUs the BOJ is hoarding are being stuffed into file cabinets or burned.

Zhou might consider similarly drastic measures in China, directly assuming more of China’s fast-growing debt problems. A major reason President Xi Jinping is reluctant to let growth fall below 7 percent is fear of defaults on municipal debt, which might set off a chain reaction in markets. Zhou can counter that threat by assuming debts, thus giving Beijing greater confidence to tolerate slower growth and to retool the economy.

The government should augment the process by creating a US-style Resolution Trust Corporatio­n to handle bad loans. But the PBOC can begin the deleveragi­ng now, while also attacking deflation .There are plenty of risks, including a run on the yuan and the chance that too much liquidity will fuel new asset bubbles.

Still, anything Zhou can do to give the country’s president breathing space to pull off one of history’s biggest and riskiest debt restructur­ings will leave the global economy better off.

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