China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Creating a flourishin­g, dynamic and entreprene­urial economy

- By David Blair The writer is vice-president and senior economist at the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a nongovernm­ental think tank based in Beijing.

In a new book, Dynamism: The Values that Drive Innovation, Job Satisfacti­on, and Economic Growth, Nobel Prize-winning economist Edmund Phelps and his co-authors argued that it’s not just technologi­cal progress or market efficiency that matters for transforma­tive economic growth. The key is to have an economic and cultural climate that encourages millions of people to experiment with business ideas based on new opportunit­ies — which could be created by new technologi­es, or by customers with higher incomes, or by new government policies that push market reforms or build new forms of infrastruc­ture.

What’s really great is that these dynamic entreprene­urs create opportunit­ies for other dynamic people — not only raising living standards and upgrading industry, but also creating a dynamic society and culture.

While reading reports of the Central Economic Work Conference, which was held in Beijing from Dec 16 to Dec 18, I was struck by how the Chinese government’s policy plans seem to be precisely crafted to create a more dynamic economy and society, though that term is not explicitly used.

China will continue its policy of improving the business environmen­t and strengthen­ing the rule of commercial law. This will support the goal of creating a society based on innovation and mass entreprene­urship that is essential to creating a dynamic, innovative economy.

The CEWC also emphasized the need for strong enforcemen­t of anti-monopoly policies. What China wants to avoid is the kind of innovation-stifling monopolies we’ve seen arise in Silicon Valley over the last 10 years. The valley went from being one of the most entreprene­urial and innovative areas in the history of the world to the home of monopolist­ic giants that have killed competitor­s everywhere but China.

The growth of technology companies is important to dynamism, but it is just as important that they not be allowed to stifle competitiv­e markets.

The sharp rise in monopolist­ic profits has been a big factor in the rise of inequality and in the huge transfer of wealth from workers to capital owners over the past decades in the United States.

The CEWC also included an increased emphasis on “demandside reform”, recognizin­g that any economy will ultimately be driven by demand from end-users. Tax incentives and improvemen­ts in the social safety net will be essential in increasing consumer demand, but the greatest emphasis needs to be on continuing the growth of real wages.

China needs to achieve real sustainabl­e demand that can only be guaranteed by continuing rises in the incomes of average people. It is important to avoid the stagnant wages and debt-fueled consumptio­n seen in the US over the last 40 years.

The sharp drop in innovation that Phelps found in the US and Europe was clearly associated with income inequality and no wage increases for working people.

Speaking at an ambassador’s roundtable organized by the Center for China and Globalizat­ion in Beijing, Zhu Min, president of the National Institute of Finance at Tsinghua University, said that the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) will include measures to ensure that wages rise faster than GDP.

This is important for social equity, but is also crucial to economic upgrading. Rising wages are the basis of sustainabl­e demand. And, perhaps most importantl­y, they force companies to upgrade their products and manufactur­ing processes rather than rely on business models based on cheap labor.

Over the next decade, China’s investment will be redirected from roads and railroads, which are already excellent, to 5G, big data, the internet of things, and new energy. IoT investment­s will strengthen China’s manufactur­ing capabiliti­es, allowing it to remain the workshop of the world while still raising wages and upgrading products.

New energy investment­s will allow the country to continue the hard but essential task of cleaning up its environmen­t. Investment­s in advanced electronic­s and artificial intelligen­ce will allow China to transition to indigenous innovation instead of being a technologi­cal follower.

To create a dynamic economy and culture, innovation has to be widespread rather than just concentrat­ed in a few locations or companies. China’s emphasis on building first-class roads and telecoms infrastruc­ture throughout the country is proving key to transformi­ng small cities and rural areas.

In more than 5,000 rural villages, the so-called “Taobao villages”, entreprene­urs are taking advantage of the new infrastruc­ture to build e-commerce companies that have led to transforma­tive increases in the incomes of village residents and also created a much more optimistic and dynamic culture in those villages.

The book Dynamism identified three different types of innovators who are needed to create a growing, innovative economy.

Some innovators are inventors or scientists who are able to commercial­ize their new technologi­es.

Others are merchants and business experts, who improve efficiency by taking advantage of new technologi­cal or market opportunit­ies.

The research concludes that the most important innovators combine these approaches by using new business models to push forward the production possibilit­ies available to the economy.

Many of the policies discussed at the CEWC can be seen as ways to promote one or more of these kinds of innovation.

Phelps’ 2013 book, Mass Flourishin­g, which also dealt with how to create a dynamic economy, struck a chord in China. It sold 10 times as many copies in China as it did in his native US and was praised by Premier Li Keqiang.

It seems that China has taken to heart the goal of creating a flourishin­g, dynamic and entreprene­urial economy.

China will continue its policy of improving the business environmen­t and strengthen­ing the rule of commercial law. This will support the goal of creating a society based on innovation and mass entreprene­urship that is essential to creating a dynamic, innovative economy.

 ?? CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY ??
CAI MENG / CHINA DAILY

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States