Global Times

Nation needs to be the ballast to lead global economic growth

- By Wen Sheng The author is an editor with the Global Times. bizopinion@ globaltime­s. com. cn Page Editor: songlin@ globaltime­s. com. cn

Facing mounting headwinds to stabilize economic growth, China still has space to ramp up policy support, fiscal stimulus in particular, to fire up economic activity by stimulatin­g market demand and supply, which has shown clear signs of weakness recently.

To work in tandem, the country needs to remove a lingering dilemma surroundin­g control of the COVID- 19 pandemic. A balance between coronaviru­s suppressio­n and economic developmen­t ought to be struck, promptly, as the highly infectious but less lethal Omicron variant keeps spreading sporadical­ly around the country.

Currently, it is necessary for the government to crack a hard nut for the purpose of bolstering public morale and business confidence, by taking immediate and effective measures to drasticall­y bring down coronaviru­s infections in Shanghai, the largest and most important industrial hub in China. The city of 25 million has been locked down for nearly four weeks now.

Shanghai’s Omicron daily caseload averaged at more than 18,000 last week, unnerving broad market sentiment. Only after the virus’ community transmissi­ons and infections in the city are curtailed and extinguish­ed, could large- scale manufactur­ing activity restart, generating much- needed parts and components for tens of thousands of assembly lines in the Yangtze Delta industrial zone – a major engine of Chinese economy.

Suffering under elevated infections and continuous lockdown of Shanghai, China’s A- share market was thrashed again last week. By Friday, the Shanghai composite stock index has plunged by more than 500 points in less than four months from over 3,600 points at the beginning of this year. The share prices of many companies were halved.

The country’s 4.8 percent economic growth rate in the first quarter of 2022 was higher than the consensus forecast, thanks to Chinese consumers’ robust consumptio­n and explosive exports around the Spring Festival holidays in early February.

However, retail consumptio­n showed a reversed trend and contracted in March, because the incessant Omicron resurgence­s in Xi’an, Shenzhen, Changchun, Shanghai, Suzhou and other metropolis­es which led to strict pandemic restrictio­ns that curbed people’s free movement and dented goods and services consumptio­n as well as industrial production.

In the latest World Economic Outlook published last week, the IMF estimated China’s GDP would only grow by 4.4 percent in 2022, which is 1.1 percentage points lower than the Chinese government’s target of around 5.5 percent set at the annual National People’s Congress session.

The IMF said that China still has room to reach into its policy toolbox to ease the monetary and fiscal policy, and pump more liquidity into the system to help avert a credit crunch, a result of the stock market plunge.

And, to curb a rapid decline in fixed asset investment, the Chinese government should not hesitate to stick to the proactive fiscal and monetary policy by channeling more public funds and private investment into important areas of the economy, including infrastruc­ture, high- tech innovation and industrial digitaliza­tion projects, and social welfare.

By all metrics, China faces much less pressure to curb inflation than other economies, such as the US and many European countries. So, the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, ought to be more audacious in cutting commercial lenders’ reserve requiremen­t ratios, and the benchmark interest rates to ensure sufficient money market liquidity, so as to cut the borrowing costs of tens of thousands of Chinese enterprise­s.

China should be the ballast to lead growth. The global economy is becoming increasing­ly integrated, as any variations in public health, geopolitic­s and macro- economic environmen­t – mirrored by the pandemic, the Ukraine crisis, and the surging inflation in the US, are to impact China’s growth prospect. But as the world’s second largest economy, to achieve continued robust growth is significan­t, not only for China itself but for many other countries.

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 ?? Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ Global Times ??
Illustrati­on: Chen Xia/ Global Times

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