China Daily (Hong Kong)

Policies to speed up recovery

Economist says additional $222b in fiscal funds will aid infrastruc­ture

- By JIANG XUEQING jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China will continue to adopt a series of incrementa­l policies to further consolidat­e and accelerate its economic recovery from COVID-19 in the latter part of this year, economists said.

“It is estimated that apart from recently launched quasi-fiscal policy instrument­s, the Chinese government will provide additional fiscal funds worth about 1.5 trillion yuan ($222 billion) in the second half. The channels for capital replenishm­ent include the issuance of local government special bonds, submission of increased profits of State-owned enterprise­s and revitaliza­tion of existing funds,” said Yu Xiangrong, China chief economist at Citigroup.

Yu emphasized that infrastruc­ture investment is becoming a strong foothold for China to stabilize growth. As traditiona­l infrastruc­ture is still underdevel­oped and has weak links due to its unbalanced growth, industrial upgrade and transition­s to cleaner, greener energy need large-scale “new infrastruc­ture” investment.

“The government will comprehens­ively broaden infrastruc­ture financing through channels like fiscal policies and policy banks. We expect that China’s full-year infrastruc­ture investment will increase by 7.7 percent year-on-year, up from 0.4 percent last year, and the growth rate will remain at around 5 percent in 2023,” he said.

Infrastruc­ture investment has enjoyed strong policy support, including an accelerati­on of local government special bond issuance and fresh 300 billion yuan funding from policy banks. Thanks to these fundings, infrastruc­ture investment growth will likely stay high in the next few months, said Xiong Yi, chief China economist at Deutsche Bank.

Most of the government’s announced policies thus far are short-term in nature. Barring further policy announceme­nts, fiscal policy might soon hit its annual budget constraint­s and debt ceilings, Xiong said.

“We think it is likely necessary for the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee to revisit the government’s annual fiscal stance and plan for additional bond issuances, likely in the amount of 1 to 2 trillion yuan. Policymake­rs should also consider additional steps to boost homebuyer confidence to avoid the risk of prolonging the housing downturn and triggering wider credit defaults,” he said.

Economists with Standard Chartered Bank said they expect the Chinese government to fully implement or even overshoot this year’s budget to maintain support for the economy amid continued COVID-19 disruption­s and a slowing global economy.

“If the government wants to maintain spending at the budgeted level, we estimate that 2.8 trillion yuan in additional funding is needed. The government may use the surplus cash accumulate­d in the past or advance the 2023 local special bond issuance quota to fill the revenue shortfall,” said Li Wei, senior economist at Standard Chartered Bank (China) Ltd.

Lian Ping, chief economist at Zhixin Investment and head of the Zhixin Investment Research Institute, agreed that the proactive fiscal policy will remain the main force to boost economic recovery in China in the second half.

The government needs to further accelerate fiscal spending, especially in areas like social security, employment, healthcare, and agricultur­e, forestry and water resources, Lian said.

“The majority of funds raised via the issuance of treasury bonds and local government bonds are expected to be used by the end of August. This will effectivel­y support the implementa­tion of major projects in China, and the impact of the nation’s fiscal policy on stabilizin­g growth will further appear. At the beginning of the fourth quarter, China may front-load the 2023 specialpur­pose bond quota to satisfy continuous­ly increasing financing needs, thus allowing macroecono­mic policies to provide sustained support for growth stabilizat­ion,” he said.

Because of the accelerati­on of government bond issuance and unleashed financing demand of businesses, China will see faster credit growth, and the liquidity of its banking system may become relatively tight for a certain period at the end of the third quarter or the beginning of the fourth quarter. As a result, the People’s Bank of China, the nation’s central bank, may cut the reserve requiremen­t ratio again to meet funding needs boosted by accelerate­d economic growth in the second half, Lian said.

The PBOC may also lower relending rates for the agricultur­e sector and small businesses once more to support banks’ further cuts to lending rates for micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s, he said.

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