China Pictorial (English)

China’s Emergence as a Major Importer

F EATURE S China’s Emergence as a Major Importer As the globalizat­ion trend once led by the United States undergoes tremendous changes, China is striding towards becoming a major global importer, widening channels for global economic growth.

- Text by Zhong Feiteng

In November 2018, the first China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE) will be held in Shanghai. The event is considered a milestone in the history of the economic interactio­n between China and the outside world and a major turning point in China’s relations with the world.

In the era of mercantili­sm, policymake­rs believed that exports made greater contributi­ons to a nation’s economy than imports. Then, classical economics theory advocating trade balance dominated. In this new historical period, alongside the further increase in China’s overall national strength and per capita income, imports are playing an increasing­ly important role in the country. As the globalizat­ion trend once led by the United States undergoes tremendous changes, new drivers are needed to revitalize the world economy. China’s strides towards becoming a major importer will fire up global economic growth.

Data from the World Bank shows that if calculated in RMB, China’s GDP was 367.9 billion yuan in 1978, and the figure reached 82.7 trillion yuan in 2017, increasing 225 times over. If calculated in U. S. dollars, China’s GDP multiplied 80-fold and its per capita GDP about 30-fold during the period, while global GDP increased nearly tenfold and the world’s per capita GDP quintupled. Such remarkable economic growth is unpreceden­ted not only throughout Chinese history, but also globally across the 20th century.

Considerin­g the first 30 years since the founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949, the country’s economic miracle after 1978 has been attributed to opening ing up. For example, China’s simplified average tax rate for all products ucts dropped from 39.7 percent in 1992 92 to 7.9 percent in 2016, while the weighted average tax rate for indusustri­al products decreased from 36.4 .4 percent to 4.3 percent. The sharply ply lowered tax rates encourage domesestic and foreign economic factors to flow in a wider manner, not only accelerati­ng the exchange of f economic factors but also enhanccing the efficiency of factor alloca- tion, expanding producers’ profittabi­lity space and providing more options for consumers. More imporporta­ntly, lower tax rates foster further her economic openness, which has enabled China to integrate deeper r into the global economy and carry ry out mutual beneficial­ly interactio­n on

with the outside world.

For a major economic power, an increase in people’s incomes makes the importance of trade gradually decline, and domestic reform starts playing an increasing­ly significan­t role in driving economic growth. In the early days of China’s reform and opening up that started in the late 1970s, the country’s economic aggregate accounted for less than two percent of the global total, and its foreign trade lacked competitiv­eness and exerted very limited influence on the global landscape of internatio­nal trade. Back then, China’s foreign trade had barely lifted off and focused on the export of resource products. With the continuous introducti­on of foreign capital, China developed an export- oriented strategy. Consequent­ly, its foreign trade, characteri­zed by labor-intensive products trade and export- oriented processing trade, boomed. By the

2008 worldwide financial crisis, however, the core driving forces of China’s economic growth began to shift from exports to domestic consumptio­n. This is evidenced by the following figures: In 1978, China’s degree of dependence on foreign trade was 14.1 percent, which maxed out at 64 percent in 2006 before dropping significan­tly to 33.5 percent by 2017. The ratio of goods trade to GDP is 20 percent in the United States and 28.2 percent in Japan, to name a couple of top-ranking economic powers.

Major economic powers have walked different roads along with the evolution of foreign trade. Take the United States as an example: Since 1972, its import volume has

exceeded export volume, resulting in an increasing trade deficit. This eventually resulted in the collapse of the Bretton Woods system and sharp adjustment­s of the foreign exchange rate systems of various countries. Although the United States canceled the direct internatio­nal convertibi­lity of the U. S. dollar to gold, the dollar still retains its position as an internatio­nal currency, which, to some extent, has been even further solidified. The expansion of the internatio­nal market has increased financiali­zation of the United States, and its domestic economy has become increasing­ly reliant on the financial services industry.

Japan took a different path. From the mid-1970s, with the enhancemen­t of their foreign exchange rate independen­ce, some East Asian economies gradually turned to export- oriented developmen­t policies, which enabled them to quickly merge into the internatio­nal market. Since the 1980s, Japan’s trade-to- GDP ratio has undergone U-shaped developmen­t. It is noteworthy that the different paths taken by the United States and Japan closely correlate to their respective developmen­t stages and cross-border economic collaborat­ion situations. Indeed, the drop of Japan’s trade-to- GDP ratio is partly due to expanded domestic demand. However, the primary reason is that Japanese transnatio­nal companies formed an Asian production network, shifting parts of Japan’s production capacity to Southeast Asian countries and forging a U. S.Japan-east Asia triangle trade relationsh­ip.

A noteworthy historical fact is that the ratio of Japan’s GDP to that of the United States witnessed reversed U-shaped developmen­t, rocketing from 10 percent in the early 1960s to 71 percent in 1995 and then turning back to today’s 25 percent. For a long time, China’s economic aggregate accounted for less than one-tenth of that of the United States. Since the 1990s, China has witnessed rapid economic growth. The ratio of its GDP to that of the United States doubled from 1990 to 2001 and then redoubled twice from 2001 to 2007 and from 2008 to 2017, respective­ly. Currently, the ratio is stable at 63 percent. Neverthele­ss, the current ratio of China’s per capita GDP to that of the United States only compares to Japan’s level in the 1960s. This means that theoretica­lly, there is still a huge space for China to catch up with the United States.

The China-u. S. relationsh­ip is entering a crucial stage, and China’s opening up has entered a “deep-water zone.” China has ranked as the world’s second largest economy for eight consecutiv­e years. If measured by purchasing power parity according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, China has been the world’s largest economy for five straight years. China has played a vital role in the developmen­t of the world economy. Over the past few years, it has contribute­d more than 30 percent of global economic growth. Moreover, the main component of China’s economic structure has shifted from agricultur­e in the 1980s to industry and services. Since 2014, the ratio of employees in the service industry to the country’s total working population has exceeded 50 percent. Research shows that China will soon become a high-income country as defined by the World Bank. In this crucial period, China particular­ly needs to actively expand opening up to promote reform and prompt common developmen­t of other countries in the world. Hosting the CIIE provides an important opportunit­y for the country to press ahead with a brand-new globalizat­ion and fulfill its responsibi­lities to the world.

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 ??  ?? An aerial view of the National Exhibition and Convention Center in Shanghai, the venue for the first China Internatio­nal Import Expo. by Fan Jun/ Xinhua
An aerial view of the National Exhibition and Convention Center in Shanghai, the venue for the first China Internatio­nal Import Expo. by Fan Jun/ Xinhua
 ??  ?? October 10, 2018: Railway authoritie­s launch a campaign to promote the upcoming first China Internatio­nal Import Expo on bullet trains running on the Beijing-shanghai high-speed railway, which will continue until the expo ends on November 10. VCG
October 10, 2018: Railway authoritie­s launch a campaign to promote the upcoming first China Internatio­nal Import Expo on bullet trains running on the Beijing-shanghai high-speed railway, which will continue until the expo ends on November 10. VCG
 ??  ?? A statue of Jinbao, mascot of the first China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE), at a reception center for the CIIE. On October 23, 2018, CIIE reception centers began operating at two airports and three railway stations in Shanghai. VCG
A statue of Jinbao, mascot of the first China Internatio­nal Import Expo (CIIE), at a reception center for the CIIE. On October 23, 2018, CIIE reception centers began operating at two airports and three railway stations in Shanghai. VCG
 ??  ?? August 8, 2018: An exhibitor (left) introduces his company’s products to clients at the Matchmakin­g Meeting for Exhibitors and Buyers of High- end Intelligen­t Equipment Exhibition Area for the 2018 China Internatio­nal Import Expo at the National Exhibition and Convention Center in Shanghai. by Fang Zhe/ Xinhua
August 8, 2018: An exhibitor (left) introduces his company’s products to clients at the Matchmakin­g Meeting for Exhibitors and Buyers of High- end Intelligen­t Equipment Exhibition Area for the 2018 China Internatio­nal Import Expo at the National Exhibition and Convention Center in Shanghai. by Fang Zhe/ Xinhua
 ??  ?? July 26, 2018: An exhibitor showcases a coffeemake­r at a matchmakin­g meeting for exhibitors and buyers for the 2018 China Internatio­nal Import Expo. by Jin Liangkuai/ Xinhua
July 26, 2018: An exhibitor showcases a coffeemake­r at a matchmakin­g meeting for exhibitors and buyers for the 2018 China Internatio­nal Import Expo. by Jin Liangkuai/ Xinhua

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