Daily Maverick

China hedges economy as geopolitic­al shocks loom

US efforts to ‘contain’ its rival’s rise are failing, but China does face other challenges.

- By Zhang Jun Zhang Jun, dean of the School of Economics at Fudan University, is also director of the China Center for Economic Studies, a Shanghai-based think-tank. Copyright: Project Syndicate 2022. www.project-syndicate.org

In terms of geopolitic­al impact, nothing could be more important than the US’s shift from strategic cooperatio­n to strategic competitio­n with China. This change has darkened many observers’ views of China’s economic prospects, as indicated by a Bruegel report released late last year. The assumption, it seems, is that China has no choice but to retreat from its successful developmen­t path and embark on a less prosperous path toward self-reliance, with the state exercising complete control over the economy to hedge against geopolitic­al shocks. But China’s efforts to bolster its self-sufficienc­y in some areas are a reasonable response to external pressures – and they hardly spell doom for its economic model or prospects.

In recent years, the US has ramped up its effort to “contain” China’s rise. Beyond employing tariffs and non-tariff barriers on imports from China, it has been limiting Chinese investment, such as by blocking Chinese companies from acquiring firms in some hi-tech sectors in the US. It has also continued to add Chinese firms to its socalled Entity List, thereby restrictin­g their access to US-controlled critical technologi­es such as semiconduc­tors, barred US capital from entering some of China’s strategic industries, and forced Chinese companies off US stock exchanges.

As my co-author Shuo Shi and I show in a 2020 paper, these policies could only carry escalating strategic costs for the US. And, contrary to popular belief, their lasting impact on the Chinese economy could be very limited, let alone enough to stop China’s economic rise in its tracks.

An even more important point is missing from this discussion. China has already crossed a crucial threshold in terms of technologi­cal strength as measured by the stock value of physical- and human-capital accumulati­on. It is now only a matter of when, not if, China catches up with the US technologi­cally.

leaders have been clear that the country must move faster toward global technologi­cal parity to better mitigate the risk from geopolitic­al impact. In recent years, the government has boosted spending to strengthen China’s capabiliti­es in basic and strategic sectors, including education, science and technology, agricultur­e and renewable energy. It has also implemente­d policies aimed at rapid developmen­t of cutting-edge hi-tech industries, such as big data, cloud computing, 5G and artificial intelligen­ce.

Similarly, in accordance with its Five-Year Plans, China has been expanding its digital infrastruc­ture. According to the ministry of industry and informatio­n technology, China has already establishe­d 1.4 million 5G base stations – more than 60% of the world’s total – with over 650,000 built last year alone.

Such efforts are largely a response to the endogenous need to shift to a more advanced stage of economic developmen­t, not simply to US containmen­t policies and geopolitic­al shocks. Given this imperative, perhaps the greatest impact of the US effort to contain China has been to clarify China’s weaknesses and spur more progress in addressing them.

Chinese authoritie­s do not believe US containmen­t policies will force China out of the global economic system, let alone lead it to an inward-looking, state-controlled developmen­t model. Prediction­s of such an effect underestim­ate the competitiv­eness gains that have driven China’s economic rise over the past few decades and the profound impact it has had on the global economy.

China has built the world’s second-largest economy and accumulate­d vast physical and human capital. It is also embedded in – and central to – global production, and has formed complement­ary relationsh­ips with advanced economies. It is unlikely to be pushed out of global supply chains.

In fact, even as China has built resilience at home, it has pursued economic liberalisa­tion, such as by improving its business climate, creating a more open financial sector and establishi­ng more free-trade zones. And the government remains committed to liberalisi­ng the domestic market to maintain linkage with internatio­nal markets.

Setting aside geopolitic­al challenges, China must confront domestic issues, beginning with an accelerati­ng fertility crisis. Though the Chinese government has eased its overly restrictiv­e fertility policies, East Asia’s experience suggests that fertility may well continue to decline, albeit at a slower rate.

To stem the decline of the working-age population, China is likely to raise the retirement age soon. At the same time, to hedge against the impact of population ageing on future economic growth, the government will continue to increase investment in education, thereby upgrading worker skills and raising labour productivi­ty in the long term.

To increase and realise the economy’s growth potential, China urgently needs to commit to productivi­ty-enhancing structural reforms. Here, it should draw lessons from East Asian economies, where a slowdown in total factor productivi­ty growth has almost always followed a period of high growth.

One such lesson is to resist political pressure to allocate resources to less productive regions. Another is to avoid capital overinvest­ment in some areas, such as real estate, that do not contribute much to productivi­ty growth and that cause macroecono­mic instabilit­y.

That is why China’s government must pursue challengin­g structural reforms that correct resource misallocat­ion and enable productivi­ty growth, the scope for which remains large. For example, China should open up more of its economy to private capital. This would channel additional resources toward more productive, entreprene­urial sectors, which will use them more efficientl­y and creatively than state-owned enterprise­s.

China’s growth and productivi­ty potential is far from being tapped out and US containmen­t policies and geopolitic­al shocks will not stop that. But, to meet its potential, China must accelerate structural reforms, as it did in the 1990s, and improve the allocation of resources by fostering a more equitable, competitiv­e and market-oriented system. Project Syndicate/DM168

China should open up more of its economy to private capital. This would channel resources to more productive sectors ... which will use them more creatively

 ?? Photo: iStock ??
Photo: iStock

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