Bangkok Post

China's economic crossroads

- By Kevin Rudd and Daniel Rosen

Back in 2013, the Chinese government laid out a policy agenda that promised real reforms to an economy laden with debt and distorted by the influence of the country’s large state-owned enterprise (SOE) sector. But instead of seeing that agenda through, China chose to dodge the risks entailed in pursuing a market economy, and has since reverted to what it knows best: state control over the economy and the semblance of stability that comes with it.

Since 2017, The China Dashboard, a joint project of the Asia Society Policy Institute and the Rhodium Group, has been tracking China’s economic policies. Having analysed objective data across ten critical spheres of the country’s economy, we find that China’s reforms have been tepid to nonexisten­t over the past three years.

The Chinese government’s failure to deliver on its promise of a more open economy has undermined its credibilit­y, and fuelled the growing global backlash that it is experienci­ng today. Even before Covid-19 arrived, the lack of reform had sapped China’s economic performanc­e and made it persistent­ly over-reliant on debt, leaving its domestic private sector increasing­ly dishearten­ed.

Now, China is at a crossroads. The Covid-19 crisis sent its economy plunging by a reported 6.8% in the first three months of this year — its first (acknowledg­ed) quarterly contractio­n on record. For the first time in more than 25 years, China is not publishing a growth target.

Moreover, because debt is now an even bigger problem for China than it was in 2013, the government does not have the option of pursuing stimulus on the massive scale that it did during and after the 2008 global financial crisis.

Piling on more debt would only aggravate the current risks to the economy, which include a property-market bubble and a swollen banking sector that, after a quadruplin­g of loan portfolios over the past decade, is sitting on mountains of shaky debt.

Faced with these limitation­s, China’s government has put reform back on the agenda. On April 9, it issued a plan to improve the “market-based allocation of factors of production”. And it followed that up on May 18 with a broad-spectrum manifesto that elevates “employment first” policies to the level of traditiona­l fiscal and monetary policy.

The new reform agenda acknowledg­es the importance of competitio­n, and proposes better protection­s for private firms, intellectu­al property, and business secrets. The government has also made pronouncem­ents about strengthen­ing market pricing mechanisms, formalisin­g property rights, and restrictin­g administra­tive interferen­ce in market activities.

This is all well and good. But can the world believe China this time? The government has yet to explain why the 2013 reform plan was not implemente­d, and the new reform pledges remain short on detail (wherein the devil lies).

Meanwhile, after being shaken by China’s initial missteps in containing Covid-19, foreign firms are increasing­ly alarmed by rising Sino-American tensions, and are seeking to diversify their investment­s across other countries. At the same time, private Chinese firms are holding back on further capital expenditur­es. If these business shifts continue, China’s ability to recover from the crisis will be hampered.

Moreover, China’s passage of a new security law for Hong Kong has further exacerbate­d its economic challenges. Apparently, the government is willing to accept high economic costs and a barrage of foreign outrage in pursuit of a more compliant Hong Kong.

But if Hong Kong descends into violence again, and if China responds with extreme forms of repression under the new law, internatio­nal firms will have less incentive to stay, further clouding the Chinese economy’s prospects.

The coming months will be crucial. If China wants to prove that its reform intentions are serious this time, it could privatise or break up some SOEs. It could abolish the remaining joint-venture requiremen­ts. It could relax foreign equity limits, thereby opening up a wider range of industries to foreign direct investment.

In fact, the European Union is already pressing China for some of these changes in ongoing negotiatio­ns for a comprehens­ive bilateral investment agreement. We should know in the second half of the year whether China is prepared to assume the risks of genuine reform.

Yet even if China does take a liberal turn on the economy, it is hard to see how it can reverse the “promise fatigue” that has already set in among the country’s internatio­nal economic partners. Officials in many market economies will insist that China do more to adjust to internatio­nal market norms, rather than expecting others to adjust to its own party-led economic system.

Significan­t economic reforms within China will be key to levelling the global playing field and preventing many foreign players from packing up and leaving.

Covid-19 is the greatest economic test China has faced in decades. The silver lining for China’s leaders is that the crisis affords them an opportunit­y to reorient the economy for sustained long-term growth through marketisat­ion.

Will President Xi Jinping grasp this reality and seize the moment? Or will he double down on the failed approach of the post-2013 period, when many promised reforms were sacrificed for fear of the change and instabilit­y they entailed?

Kevin Rudd, a former prime minister of Australia, is president of the Asia Society Policy Institute. Daniel Rosen is a founding partner of Rhodium Group. ©Project Syndicate, 2020, www.projectsyn­dicate.org

Significan­t economic reforms within China will be key to levelling the global playing field and preventing many foreign players from packing up and leaving

 ??  ?? Residentia­l buildings under constructi­on are seen in Jinpu New District in Dalian, Liaoning province in 2018.
Residentia­l buildings under constructi­on are seen in Jinpu New District in Dalian, Liaoning province in 2018.

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