Business Standard

The way forward for the Chinese economy

- ZHANG BIN

As part of the cycle of economic developmen­t, all advanced economies have undergone industrial­isation and postindust­rialisatio­n. Industrial­isation involved the manufactur­ing sector’s focus on increasing GDP, employment rate and consumptio­n of manufactur­ed products. For China, the postindust­rialisatio­n phase implies economic activity will be concentrat­ed in the service industry.

Based on measures such as income level, the rate of growth of the manufactur­ing sector, employment rate and the consumptio­n of manufactur­ed products, China has passed the peak of industrial­isation. If global experience is a guide, the peak of industrial­isation happens when per capita GDP ranges between $8,000 and $10,000 (PPP based on 1990 value). After reaching the peak of $10,000, industrial sector indicators continue to decline. By this yardstick, China has passed the peak of industrial­isation.

China’s per capita GDP reached the $8,030 mark in 2010. This was the point from where a shift from the manufactur­ing to the service sector had to occur. In 2016, per capita GDP (nominal) was around $12,200. The nominal manufactur­ing growth rate reached its 30-year peak of 41.8 per cent in 2006, and it has declined in subsequent years. The proportion of employment in manufactur­ing reached a peak of 30.3 per cent in 2012 and started declining thereafter. The consumptio­n of manufactur­ed products reached its peak in 2011 and has declined since.

In terms of both global experience and from a theoretica­l point of view, unless there is serious negative growth in income, these developmen­ts constitute a major inflection point for China. The demand for traditiona­l labour-intensive or standard capital-intensive manufactur­ed products has been steadily decreasing. This in turn has dragged the growth rate down, both domestical­ly and globally. This creates a need for China to develop a “new engine” of economic developmen­t.

A “new engine” will need to produce products and services that match income growth and changing demand patterns. Demand for these products or services is growing faster than revenue growth — the demand elasticity is greater than unity, and spending on these products and services becomes a facilitato­r of economic developmen­t. From the supply side perspectiv­e, such products and services are also skill-intensive.

A new engine of economic growth will require upgrading the manufactur­ing sector. Crossing the peak of industrial­isation has also meant a drop in profits for most manufactur­ing sub-sectors in China. These pressures have also become the driving force for industrial upgrading in different ways. These include adopting technologi­cal innovation, developing new products, horizontal and/or vertical integratio­n of production to save per-unit cost, improving labour and production efficienci­es. Services within enterprise­s in the traditiona­l industrial sector in China are now increasing­ly likely to hive off into independen­t specialise­d service providers.

So far, China has achieved significan­t progress in upgrading its manufactur­ing sector. In the field of high-end industrial products, the gap between advanced economies and China is noticeable, but the “Made in China” initiative is helping close this gap. In addition to brands which produce products of daily use, some wellknown brands are steadily increasing their competitiv­eness in both domestic and internatio­nal markets, such as Huawei, Hai’er, Guangdong-based Gree Electric Appliances, Xiaomi, digital and electrical equipment manufactur­er Hisense, and automobile major Great Wall Motors.

China’s evolving economic transition has two distinct features. One involves creating an environmen­t for industry upgradatio­n, and the other attempts to support an open and highly competitiv­e market at home. China’s attempt is to showcase a unique economic model based on its position both as the world’s largest producer and consumer of manufactur­ed products, and of Chinese manufactur­ing enterprise­s having a broader market and the advantage of industrial clusters.

The new engine of Chinese growth will also be based on the developmen­t of technology­intensive and skilled human capital services. The contributi­on of such technology-intensive enterprise­s and skilled human capital to economic growth is not only a proven internatio­nal experience but also fulfills China’s growth requisites. When one examines the average contributi­on of the service industry to GDP growth rate in the last five years, a ratio greater than one indicates that the sector contribute­d significan­tly to China’s GDP growth rate.

As in America, not all technology-intensive services grow equally fast; the lower-skill/lower-tech service industries create the lag in overall economic growth. Among the 14 major categories of services, 10 are growing at a faster clip than China’s GDP growth rate. The four sub-sectors with lower growth rates include transporta­tion, warehousin­g, post and telecommun­ications services, hospitalit­y and catering, residentia­l and other services, public management and social organisati­ons. However, these sub-sectors are already fairly well-developed in China.

Crucially, the fast-growing areas include health, social security, social welfare, leasing and business services, finance, scientific research and technical services, geological prospectin­g, water conservati­on, environmen­t and the management of public facilities. These are also the sub-sectors that require higher skilled human resources and are increasing­ly necessary for China.

China’s new growth engine will be technology­intensive and skilled human capital services, whose contributi­on is proven by internatio­nal experience

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