Financial Nigeria Magazine

China's new digital dividend

- By Andrew Sheng, Xiao Geng

Over the past four decades, China has gone from being a low-wage supplier to one of the three most important links in the global value chain, alongside the United States and Germany. Despite growing concerns about China's corporate debt – which is now close to 170% of GDP – and its ability to escape the middleinco­me trap, rapid digitizati­on will allow the Chinese economy to continue moving up the value chain.

Following its strategic “opening up” almost 40 years ago, China provided an abundant source of cheap land and labour, which enabled it to achieve economies of scale in consumer manufactur­ing. Then, as China moved toward middle-income status, it became a major consumer market in itself.

In 2012, China's current leaders recognized that the country's “demographi­c dividend” had run its course: the Chinese economy was reaching its “Lewis turning point,” the stage at which its surplus labour supply would be exhausted, and wages would start to rise. And, at the same time, the “opening-up dividend” was also reaching maturity, and encounteri­ng protection­ist barriers around the world.

China can still tap new markets through efforts such as the “Belt and Road Initiative,” but at a considerab­le cost. Ultimately, sustaining rapid growth requires continuing to move up the global value chain, by implementi­ng further economic reforms and focusing on new technologi­es.

The Chinese government's 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-2020) reflected its commitment to market allocation of resources and lowering the costs of doing business. And in 2015, the authoritie­s' “Made in China 2025” and “Internet Plus” initiative­s signalled a determinat­ion to take the country's manufactur­ing base into the Internet age. Together, the two plans aim to integrate artificial intelligen­ce (AI), robotics, and social media into manufactur­ing processes, and to digitize China's economy and society.

Since 2015, China has taken the lead in ecommerce worldwide, with online purchases accounting for 18% of total retail sales, compared to just 8% in the US. China's three leading tech platforms – Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent – have grown to the point that they are beginning to compete with US-based global tech giants such as Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, and Netflix.

Moreover, according to iResearch, mobile payments in China already amount to $5.5 trillion, roughly 50 times that of the US. In most Chinese cities, electronic-wallet apps on mobile phones are replacing cash as the primary method of payment.

China's leap into the digital age was facilitate­d by a combinatio­n of physical and digital technologi­es and new business models. According to a recent study by Bruegel, China already spends more on research and developmen­t, as a percentage of GDP, than the European Union; and it now produces as many scientific publicatio­ns as the US and more PhDs in natural sciences and engineerin­g. And, by streamlini­ng the exchange of informatio­n and facilitati­ng coordinati­on of complex tasks, the Chinese social-media app WeChat – with 938 million users as of the first quarter of 2017 – has contribute­d to previously unimaginab­le productivi­ty gains.

According to the Boston Consulting Group, Chinese e-commerce platforms' business models have evolved differentl­y from those in the West, as they have responded to Chinese consumers' rapidly increasing spending power and enthusiasm for innovation. Having been encouraged by the government to experiment with Internet-based business models, Chinese firms are upending traditiona­l practices. And this is happening so quickly that even the government now feels pressure to catch up, by adopting new technologi­es such as blockchain and AI.

E-payments are a key factor in lowering business and transactio­n costs in China, because they improve efficiency in the retail sector, where prices can still be higher than in the US even when the products are made in China. But the emergence of fraud and the failures of some peer-to-peer (P2P) platforms point to the need for tighter regulation­s to maintain systemic stability.

As more activities become digitized, China's integratio­n into the global value chain will increasing­ly occur in digital spaces. Chinese producers can use 3D printing, robotizati­on, and Big Data and AI applicatio­ns at the local level, while still tapping into global markets and sourcing ideas and skills from abroad. There are now endless possibilit­ies for dividing production and consumptio­n into separate stages. But this also implies that the new digital economy's many successes will be accompanie­d by many failures.

Indeed, Chinese policymake­rs will have to confront various “digital dilemmas” in the coming years. Many public utilities in China – such as airlines, railways, ports, and telecommun­ications – are single-product entities administer­ed by state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs). Yet the new tech giants are multi-product, omni-channel platforms that cut across all sectors, including production, distributi­on, payments, and, increasing­ly, wealth management.

As in a game of Go, China's leaders need to move the country's pieces – that is to say, effect change in the SOEs' business models – in the right place, at the right time, and in a coordinate­d fashion. Superficia­l complaints about the slow pace of SOE reforms ignore the strategic challenge of creating productive competitio­n between SOEs and publicly listed tech giants in the digital space.

SOE managers can credibly argue that heavy regulation­s place them at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge, and that the tech giants are eating their lunch by free-riding on state-administer­ed telecommun­ication, transporta­tion, and financial channels. The tech giants, meanwhile, argue that if they could just move faster into inefficien­t production and distributi­on areas, not least mobile payments, productivi­ty growth would accelerate.

Another dilemma is that digitizati­on is good for consumers, but possibly bad for employment and social stability. In a “Digital China,” there will necessaril­y be winners and losers. But the sooner displaced workers can adapt to new realities, the healthier the system will be.

China's transforma­tion into a knowledgeb­ased economy occupying a central position in the global value chain will ultimately yield a “reform dividend.” But as exciting as that transforma­tion will be, it will also be dangerous. Never before has an economy so large undergone such far-reaching change so quickly.

Andrew Sheng is a Distinguis­hed Fellow of the Asia Global Institute at the University of Hong Kong. Xiao Geng, President of the Hong Kong Institutio­n for Internatio­nal Finance, is a professor at the University of Hong Kong. Copyright: Project Syndicate

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria