China Daily

The pains of structural transforma­tion

- The author is a professor of economics and director of the China Center for Economic Studies at Fudan University. Project Syndicate

For more than a year, headlines worldwide have been pointing to a Chinese economic slowdown. But a closer look at regional dynamics within China tells a different story — one that is less about decelerati­on than changing gears.

According to China’s National Bureau of Statistics, the resourceri­ch province of Shanxi in North China has suffered an economic slowdown, but Southwest China’s Chongqing municipali­ty and Guizhou province have experience­d vibrant growth. North China’s Hebei province and three other northeaste­rn provinces are feeling the effects of recession, but the heavy-industry economies of Tianjin municipali­ty, and North China’s Shandong province and East China’s Jiangsu province are booming.

After the 2008 financial crisis, when slower growth became the “new normal” for many countries, China began accelerati­ng its economic rebalancin­g by shifting the drivers of growth from manufactur­ing and exports toward goods and services for domestic consumptio­n.

This transition has had farreachin­g implicatio­ns for the future dynamics of China’s economy. Previously, the economic activities that are now flourishin­g weren’t categorize­d as manufactur­ing industries at all, but as “services”. But services do not exist in a vacuum. All businesses need manufactur­ed products, transporta­tion, informatio­n and communicat­ions technology (ICT), logistics, real estate, finance, insurance and more.

Thus, new demand for new services has virtuous-cycle effects in terms of capital investment in infrastruc­ture and equipment. Contrary to the convention­al wisdom, the growth of services in China to meet domestic demand does not mean the end of manufactur­ing and capital investment, much less of economic growth.

Service sectors stand to make up for much, if not all, of the growth lost to lower output in export-oriented manufactur­ing sectors. China’s transporta­tion, ICT, finance, insurance, real estate, education and healthcare sectors have long had inappropri­ately low labor productivi­ty, which means they have significan­t room to grow faster.

According to a paper by economists Jong-Wha Lee and Warwick J. McKibbin, service-sector productivi­ty growth in Asia “benefits all sectors eventually, and contribute­s to the sustained and balanced growth of Asian economies”. Examining economic developmen­t trends in the Republic of Korea, the authors find that the average value added per worker in transporta­tion, real estate and ICT is now higher than the average in manufactur­ing, and they point to similar dynamics in the United States, Japan and China.

This finding suggests that rapid developmen­t in China’s service economy could reverse the externally triggered dampening of growth since 2008. But, as the

Japanese and ROK transition­s from export to domestic demanddriv­en growth demonstrat­e, structural transforma­tion is a slow and painful process.

China is in the midst of that process, and it must be careful not to undermine existing sources of growth lest it fall into a structural trap where the cost of transition itself derails new gains. It is not a good sign that the high costs in many Chinese provinces have been weighing down overall growth.

This points to fundamenta­l challenges ahead, notwithsta­nding the significan­t economic potential of Chinese consumers. For starters, economic developmen­t based on diversifie­d domestic demand is more complicate­d than export-driven developmen­t, because these new sectors rely more heavily on sophistica­ted financial services, free and equitable market access, better educated workers, and higher investment in research and developmen­t.

As a result, the new businesses emerging from the shift to a new growth model are demanding far more from China’s current economic-governance system than it can bear. Further structural reforms would go a long way toward fixing this problem, but they will also require China’s leaders to make tough political decisions that won’t please everyone.

Another fundamenta­l challenge is China’s slow rate of urbanizati­on, which is still lagging, even after 25 years of export-led growth. Each of a thriving service economy’s major components — ICT, finance, insurance, transporta­tion and real estate — needs the others to prosper, and cities are what bring them all together — a phenomenon of network externalit­ies.

China’s cities will be a key ingredient of its long-term economic success. Urbanizati­on should start accelerati­ng today, and over the next 10-15 years, with the expansion of metropolit­an areas geared toward the needs of services-led economic growth. If China can rise to that challenge, it will be well positioned to clear the remaining hurdles in its path toward highincome status.

 ?? CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY ??
CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong