BusinessMirror

China’s factory overcapaci­ty alarms world, but there’s no quick x in sight

- BY BLOOMBERG NEWS With assistance from Karthikeya­n Sundaram, Josh Xiao, Christophe­r Condon and Brendan Murray / Bloomberg

THE groundswel­l of complaints about China’s factory output keeps getting louder, but there’s no sign Beijing is ready for xes that might back re on its vulnerable economy.

This week European Union leaders, who are threatenin­g tari s on electric cars, were the latest to scold China about overcapaci­ty. Before she met visiting President Xi Jinping, the bloc’s chief Ursula von der Leyen said she’s hoping for action in the “short term.”

She’ll likely be disappoint­ed. China did announce proposals Wednesday to slow expansion in the battery industry, but they’re not binding. Meanwhile the state planning agency last week published a four-part rebuttal of claims that the country has too much capacity to make cleanenerg­y products. It said Chinese industry is competitiv­e thanks to innovation, not subsidies.

That’s become Beijing’s standard line about high-tech industries like EVS and solar panels.

They’re crucial to Xi’s blueprint for reviving the economy—which is why China probably won’t stop supporting them, however much it’s urged to. ey’re strategica­lly important for other countries too, which is why trade barriers are going up.

But China’s trade partners— ncluding friendly ones like Brazil—are also raising objections about all kinds of products lower down the value chain, from steel and petrochemi­cals to excavators. In many of these areas, surpluses emerged as an unwanted side effect of the real-estate slump weighing down China’s economy.

Beijing hasn’t gured out how to halt that slide yet, except by turning to high-tech as an o set, so both types of over-production are set to persist.

“There is no single, quick x for China’s overcapaci­ty chalndleng­e,” says Frederic Neumann, chief Asia economist at HSBC Holdings Plc. In clean energy the root cause is China’s “robust investment,” he says, while in more traditiona­l industries the problem is weak demand, “especially from faltering housing constructi­on.”

What’s ultimately needed, according to Neumann, is “a twopronged approach” to balance supply and demand, which involves stabilizin­g China’s housing market and helping consumers to spend more.

But that’s a big ask—as even some of China’s strongest capacity critics admit.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s recent visit was dominated by the issue. Her team repeatedly chided Beijing for steering state funds into key industries, propping up money-losing companies and ooding world markets with exports that threaten the livelihood of local rms.

The US view is that China should rely more on demand from its own consumers, and less on the rest of the world. Yellen acknowledg­ed the scale of that challenge. “is is a complicate­d issue that involves their entire macroecono­mic and industrial strategy,” she told reporters in Guangzhou. “It’s not going to be solved in an afternoon or a month.”

Right now, far from being ready to shoulder more of the burden of driving growth, Chinese households and local government­s are tightening their belts after the housing crash.

With domestic demand weak, the industrial capacity utilizatio­n rate dropped last quarter to the lowest since the pandemic hit in early 2020. Factories are pivoting to overseas markets, exports have soared and prices plunged.

e solar panel industry is one case where there’s a glut, after a massive expansion led to a price war and a collapse in pro tability.

In autos, the picture is more complex. Capacity use dropped sharply in the rst quarter of this year, but major exporters of EVS— like BYD Co. and Tesla Inc.—have been running at higher levels than the industry overall, according to estimates from JSC Automotive.

at points to a growing number of idle factories that used to make petrol cars and got caught out by China’s rapid switch to EVS.

One x for the EV tensions

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen’s recent visit was dominated by China’s overcapaci­ty issue. Her team repeatedly chided Beijing for steering state funds into key industries, propping up money-losing companies and ooding world markets with exports that threaten the livelihood of local rms.

may be for Chinese rms to start producing in other countries.

Japan’s economic stando with the US in the 1980s eased after Japanese carmakers invested in American plants. Chinese rms are starting to follow that path in Europe, South America and Asia, with backing from Beijing. e Communist Party’s main decision-making body said last week it would “support private enterprise­s in expanding overseas markets.”

Xi’s European itinerary included stops in Hungary, where BYD plans a factory—and France, where Prime Minister Bruno Le Maire said his country would welcome one, too.

But that’s a longer-run strategy. BYD says it’ll take three years to start producing in Hungary. And it may not work in the US, where there’s growing hostility to any Chinese investment.

In older industries, there’s a precedent from almost a decade ago when China tried to deal with massive overcapaci­ty in steel and aluminum. It forced the industry to rationaliz­e and closed down less-e cient producers.

Yellen and her Treasury colleagues say Beijing should take a similar pro t-focused approach to industries now.

“The share of money-losing rms in China is as high as it’s been in decades,” Jay Shambaugh, undersecre­tary for internatio­nal a airs, said last month. “You’ve got

rms that are not really responding to what the market will bear.”

But closing rms and cutting jobs in a weak economy is a highrisk move. What’s more, China’s policies of the 2010s didn’t lead to a substantia­l decline in output. And lately the problem has reared its head again, with steel exports surging to an eight-year high and triggering complaints worldwide.

In all of this, the underlying issue is that China’s state-led expansion of manufactur­ing isn’t matched by growth in consumptio­n at home, says Camille Boullenois, an analyst at Rhodium Group.

“There are only a few ways companies can deal with it: they can under-utilize their production capacity, keep goods in inventorie­s, export more, or import less,” she says. “We’re seeing all these e ects at the moment in China.”

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 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? URSULA VON DER LEYEN, right, with Xi Jinping and Emmanuel Macron following their meeting in Paris on May 6.
BLOOMBERG URSULA VON DER LEYEN, right, with Xi Jinping and Emmanuel Macron following their meeting in Paris on May 6.

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