Global Times

Countermea­sures can ease impact from trade tension

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The trade friction instigated by the US was always inevitable. The move from cooperatio­n to competitio­n in China-US relations is not surprising, but it will cause damage for both sides. China may feel more negative effects in the short term, but in the long run, the trade tension will come back to bite the US harder, as long as China adopts the right countermea­sures and prepares for the worst.

If the trade friction worsens, there are two potential situations that could come about. One is that China and the US impose 30-60 percent tariffs on each other. The other is a massive global trade war involving many countries.

However, the impact is unlikely to be as severe as that from the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis. From 2007 to 2009, the growth rate of Chinese GDP slowed by around 4 percent. But China has greatly reduced tariffs on many products, so imports will not fall as much as they did during the 2008 crisis. The manufactur­ing and real estate sectors are also unlikely to suffer as much as before, and infrastruc­ture investment will continue to boost GDP growth.

The 2008 crisis dented the global financial system, but the trade tension will not. Additional­ly, China’s trade partners and members of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) such as South Korea, the Philippine­s, Thailand and Malaysia have higher capacity utilizatio­n rates than before.

The Chinese economy will face challenges. Amid tougher regulation­s and tighter supervisio­n of the financial market and local government debt, enterprise­s will find it harder to gain financing than before and there could be credit risks. China’s GDP growth may slow to 6 percent in the next six or 12 months.

Stimulatio­n of consumptio­n can no longer be relied upon. With a large aging population, growth in consumptio­n could result in a lower savings rate. This would increase the cost of financing and curb investment. Therefore, the downward pressure on economic growth could be considerab­le. Consumptio­n alone can hardly support the current growth of the Chinese economy.

Fixed-asset investment from January to May was stable. Investment in manufactur­ing and real estate was stronger than in the second half of 2017. But lower income and lower expectatio­ns for enterprise­s’ profitabil­ity amid the trade tension could curb investment, especially for the manufactur­ing industry.

It is possible that exports and imports could see a sharp fall in the third quarter. Before the tariffs on both sides took effect on July 6, exporters in China came up with a method to avoid paying extra tariffs by making deliveries in advance, so the export data for the second quarter was still decent.

The trade situation will also affect China’s consumer price inflation (CPI) through imported commoditie­s with higher prices. CPI at the end of 2018 could potentiall­y reach 3 percent.

Against this backdrop, China will have to prepare countermea­sures.

The nation’s fiscal policies will have to be more proactive. The one-year-aggregated overall government deficit to GDP ratio reached a record high by the end of May. Taxes such as value-added tax and individual income tax need to be further reduced. At the same time, China will need to keep to the opening-up trend, as well as continuing to lower restrictio­ns on financial services, manufactur­ing and other retail industries.

Monetary policies need to focus on supporting the real economy and stabilizin­g deleveragi­ng. The policies must provide sufficient funds for quasi-fiscal activities and livelihood projects. The risk of debt defaults also needs to be tamed.

The short-term depreciati­on of the yuan will not last. The fundamenta­ls of the Chinese economy are sound and the pressure for capital outflows has fallen since 2015. Certain controls can also be put in place if the deprecatio­n pressure gets stronger.

The China-US trade conflict will not be a short-term situation. But China’s potential can ease the pressure from shrinking external demand. The internal demand revival will promote higher national consumptio­n and domestic investment, leading to sustained growth for the Chinese economy.

The rise of China is an unstoppabl­e historical trend. China will need to go with the trend and keep on opening up, innovating and promoting peaceful developmen­t.

The article was compiled based on a report by Qiu Xiaohua, chief strategy officer with the Sunshine Insurance Group and chief economist with Guangdong Huaxing Bank. The report was first published by Urban Innovation Think-tank, a Shanghai-based think tank. bizopinion@ globaltime­s.com.cn

 ?? Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT ??
Illustrati­on: Luo Xuan/GT

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