China Daily Global Weekly

Inflation, deflation and ‘collapse’ bunk

Western media’s alternatin­g narratives about the risks facing China’s economy all fall flat

- By DAN STEINBOCK The author is the founder of Difference Group and has served at India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institutes for Internatio­nal Studies (China) and the EU Centre (Singapore). The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of Ch

During the year, some Western media outlets have attributed global inflation and deflation risk to China. More recently, the claim has been that China’s economy is about to collapse. In reality, China’s economic recovery will intensify in the current half of this year.

Informatio­n war is the new normal in internatio­nal media. Contrarian voices are not just marginaliz­ed, but algorithm excluded. Also, the line between ideologies and facts has blurred. The New York Times columnist Bret Stephens believes China’s economy is on secular decline (Aug 29), just as he denies climate change and promotes neoconserv­ative foreign policy.

The interest conflicts of some “opinion leaders” are obvious. The Hill’s Peter St Onge, who declared that China has collapsed (Sep 13), is a fellow of the Heritage Foundation, a neoconserv­ative think tank. Bloomberg interviewe­d a purported China expert named Kyle Bass, who said “China’s economy is “circling the drain” (Sep 11). Bass is a Texasbased investor and a member of several anti-China groups who has for years (unsuccessf­ully) used his hedge fund to bet against China and the yuan. His alleged stock manipulati­on has been scrutinize­d by US regulators and The Wall Street Journal.

Then there was the bizarre Newsweek story (Sept 5), suggesting Shanghai “has turned into a ‘ghost town’” due to China’s economic collapse. It built on a tweet by “independen­t journalist” Michael Yon, who cites a mystery “friend from China” to back up the claim.

Yon is a former member of “Special Forces” who reportedly spent more time “embedded with combat units” than any other journalist in Iraq and has popped up in destabiliz­ed targets ever since, including Hong Kong in 2019. In the past, his credibilit­y has been challenged by US media and even the Pentagon.

In the past three quarters, the three media myths about China risks have been inflation, deflation and collapse. But what are the facts?

When China withdrew the COVID-19 prevention and control measures and began reopening its economy at the beginning of this year, internatio­nal observers warned that the world’s second-largest economy would become a “global inflation threat”. There was a problem with the narrative. Numbers did not back it up, as I showed in an op-ed in China Daily in March.

After the first quarter of the year passed, internatio­nal pundits turned their earlier narrative upside down. When Chinese inflation rate was flat in June, these oracles claimed China was facing an impending deflationa­ry crash.

But was China really a global deflation risk? That presumes that price levels in China reflect a sustained fall, and that such deflation is somehow exported worldwide.

In reality, the deflationa­ry preconditi­ons were not in place, as I showed in an op-ed in July. Then, I predicted that despite internatio­nal headwinds, China’s “rebound is strengthen­ing … and economic recovery is likely to strengthen in the second half of the year”.

Now that seems to be the case. The better-than-expected economic data for August suggests that China’s economic recovery is strengthen­ing. On the supply side, the industrial value added recorded a 4.5 percent year-on-year increase. On the demand side, retail sales, a main gauge of consumptio­n, beat expectatio­ns following the summer travel peak and consumptio­n-boosting measures.

In the coming quarters, the rebound is likely to further strengthen on stimulus, including the increase in tax allowances. And early signs suggest that consumptio­n recovery will accelerate during the upcoming National Day holidays.

The key issue for domestic recovery remains the ailing property market, though policymake­rs hope to restore consumer confidence in the sector through a reduced down payment ratio and a ceiling on new mortgage rates.

As recovery gathers pace in firsttier cities, policymake­rs hope to see positive spillover effects in other cities and regions. On Sept 15, the People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, kept the interest rate unchanged but boosted liquidity through medium-term lending. Moreover, the sharp, geopolitic­ally-induced downturn in semiconduc­tors may be bottoming out. And Huawei’s impressive 5G Mate 60 suggests China is moving toward self-sufficienc­y in high-tech much faster than expected.

The challengin­g external headwinds reflect some moderation, for now. As long as the West’s geopolitic­al unilateral­ism and protection­ism continue, global demand is likely to remain sluggish, weighing heavily on global recovery.

The eurozone is coping with recession, the United Kingdom is struggling under the disastrous impact of Brexit, the US economy is flirting with recessiona­ry risks, and Japan’s rising debt continues to maintain persistent stagnation and deflation. In contrast, China’s growth could be anything between 4.5 percent and 5 percent this year. Given the US trade wars against and its geopolitic­al targeting of China, it would be an impressive achievemen­t.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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