Gulf News

China needs more than mere tinkering

This time, reforms need to be enacted in the economy and far-reaching ones at that

- By Shang-Jin Wei Special to Gulf News

This year marks a decade since the global financial crisis erupted. For the US, 2018 is very different from 2008. The economy has gone from the brink of collapse to the brink of overheatin­g, thanks to a massive tax cut enacted when growth was already robust.

The attitude toward China has also changed dramatical­ly. Recognitio­n that cooperatio­n with China was necessary to manage global demand has given way to protection­ism and hostility.

Yet, for China, 2018 feels similar to 2008 in an important way: negative shocks originatin­g in the US pose a significan­t threat to its economic growth. In 2008, the shock was a decline in demand for its exports. Today, it is the trade war initiated by US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion.

The risks China faces are not entirely outside its control. The situation could be made worse if the country repeats the policy responses of 2008 — namely, relying exclusivel­y on massive fiscal and monetary stimulus to prop up demand.

While the authoritie­s’ response a decade ago did avert a sharp recession, it also paved the way for many other problems, including soaring debt levels for local government­s and state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs), the expansion of shadow banking, the re-emergence of excess capacity in several sectors, and a decline in the relative strength of private firms.

The Trump administra­tion has invoked some of these consequenc­es as justificat­ions for its trade war.

In these circumstan­ces, China might be tempted to double down on stimulatin­g aggregate demand with short-term measures like channellin­g more infrastruc­ture investment through local government­s and further credit easing for state-owned firms. But that approach would risk creating another decade’s worth of problems.

A better strategy would be to focus on structural reforms.

For starters, private firms need to know that they are competing with SOEs on a level playing field in terms of regulation and law enforcemen­t, access to bank loans and other resources, and opportunit­ies to secure government contracts. Non-state-owned firms have been the most important source of growth in the last four decades, so it is encouragin­g that People’s Bank of China Governor Yi Gang emphasised this principle of “competitiv­e neutrality” in a recent speech.

Similarly, when it comes to foreign trade and investment, China should adopt a principle of “government neutrality” to regulate cooperatio­n and contractua­l negotiatio­ns, including technology transfer, between foreign and domestic firms.

More broadly, it should continue to reduce barriers to trade and investment by foreign firms in China, including by following through on the announced relaxation of restrictio­ns on foreign financial firms operating in the country. Such measures would raise Chinese households’ real income by enhancing their purchasing power, while strengthen­ing the competitiv­eness of the country’s corporate sector by putting pressure on less efficient domestic firms.

Establishi­ng greater labour-market flexibilit­y is the third structural reform China needs. Since the mid-1990s, the combined mandatory contributi­on rate for public pensions, medical care, and other benefits has officially been very high — about 50 per cent over the wage bill, which is higher than the median contributi­on rate in OECD countries.

Yet weak enforcemen­t long meant that domestic firms largely ignored those costs. Then, in 2008, the authoritie­s began to enforce the contributi­on rate vigorously, which squeezed firms.

Add to that a requiremen­t that firms must offer a long-term contract to any individual after two consecutiv­e short-term contracts and pay a hefty severance package if they need to downsize the workforce. As a result, the economy’s ability to handle negative shocks and adjust the compositio­n of employment has been severely diminished.

Given China’s productivi­ty levels and stage of developmen­t, a combined mandatory contributi­on rate of about 35-40 per cent for all government-provided benefits would be more appropriat­e. The adoption of that rate, together with other measures to enhance labour-market flexibilit­y, could boost China’s economic resilience considerab­ly.

A final reform that would go a long way toward fortifying China’s economy would be a temporary reduction of the corporatei­ncome and value-added tax rates.

I suggest a temporary tax cut for two reasons. A temporary cut would put far less pressure on the public budget than a permanent one, while simultaneo­usly providing more incentive for firms to invest. In this sense, such a cut would amount to both supply-side reform and aggregate demand management.

China’s leaders are aware of the need for most of these reforms; indeed, they have made supply-side reform their official policy mantra. But, so far, they have been focusing on reducing excess capacity and deleveragi­ng, rather than on measures that will boost private entreprene­urs’ confidence, reduce the economy’s vulnerabil­ity to shocks, and buttress growth.

Given that two of these reforms — competitiv­e neutrality and greater openness to both domestic private-sector firms and internatio­nal firms — would also help to assuage the US, the moment to act could not be better. ■ Shang-Jin Wei is a former chief economist of the Asian Developmen­t Bank.

 ?? Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News ??
Ramachandr­a Babu/©Gulf News

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