The Guardian (USA)

Is China overtaking the US as a financial and economic power?

- Jeffrey Frankel

The World Bank’s Internatio­nal Comparison Program has just released its latest measures of price levels and GDP across 176 countries – and the results are striking. For the first time, the ICP finds that China’s total real (inflation-adjusted) income is slightly larger than that of the US. In purchasing power parity (PPP) terms, China’s 2017 GDP was $19.617tn (£15.7tn), whereas the US’s stood at $19.519tn

Of course, when China’s total income is divided by its massive population, the picture changes. Although China’s per capita income has pulled ahead of Egypt’s, it remains in the middle of the pack globally, behind Brazil, Iran, Thailand and Mexico.

In any case, the two concepts – total and per capita income – each have distinct implicatio­ns for geopolitic­s, so one must consider them separately. China wants to be treated like a developing country (at least in trade negotiatio­ns), and the ICP’s per capita income figure shows that it is precisely that. But when it comes to power politics and China’s influence in internatio­nal institutio­ns, total income matters more.

The ICP compares countries on a PPP basis, which is the right method when computing per capita incomes, but potentiall­y problemati­c when assessing geopolitic­al power. On the latter question, a better approach would be to compare national GDPs at actual exchange rates, in which case the US economy turns out still to be far ahead of China’s.

When the ICP released its last report six years ago, it created a media flurry, with headlines such as the Financial Times’ “China poised to pass US as world’s leading economic power this year”. Those ICP measures, which pertained to 2011, showed that China’s GDP was gaining rapidly on that of the US. Soon thereafter, it was reported that the crossover had indeed taken place, at least according to national growth statistics interpolat­ed between the six-year ICP benchmarks.

But, again, those findings were based on a PPP reading of the data. The problem, familiar to internatio­nal economists, is that Chinese and US output are each measured in the country’s respective currency. How should one translate the numbers so that they are comparable?

The obvious solution is to use the contempora­neous exchange rate: multiply China’s yuan-measured GDP by the dollar-per-yuan exchange rate, so that it is expressed in dollars. Viewed in these terms, the US economy ($19.519tn) is still more than 50% larger than China’s ($12.144tn), according to the latest figures.

By contrast, measuring GDP in PPP terms is more appropriat­e for comparing standards of living because it accounts for the fact that many goods and services are cheaper in China than they are in the US. Generally speaking, one yuan spent in China will go much further than one yuan spent abroad. While some internatio­nally traded goods have similar prices, things like haircuts – a service that cannot readily be exported or imported – are cheaper in China than in the US.

The PPP measure has many uses but assessing geopolitic­al power is not one of them. It is not helpful in answering the primary question that most commentato­rs fixate on: how China’s economic size and power compare with the US’s in the broader contest for global supremacy.

For that, a more relevant considerat­ion is, for example, how much money China can contribute to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and other multilater­al agencies, and how much voting power it should get in return. Another considerat­ion is the view from other countries with rival claims in the South China Sea: how many ships can China buy, build and deploy? For these and other geopolitic­al questions, it is more useful to rely on China’s GDP at current exchange rates. The issue isn’t how many haircuts Chinese consumers can buy but what the yuan can buy on world markets.

To be sure, some point out that the IMF itself presents GDP in PPP terms for certain very limited purposes in its World Economic Outlook. But the IMF takes no stand on the question of which economy is bigger.

The closest it comes to offering an official position is with its formula guiding the assignment of quota shares to member countries. Here, the measuremen­t of GDP is weighted, with 60% counted at market exchange rates and only 40% at PPP rates. (The GDP index accounts for half of the total formula; other measures, such as trade openness, comprise the other half.)

The IMF takes quota sizes seriously. If China were to attain a higher quota than the US, for example, the Fund’s articles of agreement would require it to move its headquarte­rs from Washington, DC, to Beijing.

For now, China has far less clout than the US at the IMF. But under President Donald Trump, the US is surrenderi­ng its influence in multilater­al organisati­ons such as the World Trade Organizati­on, Nato, and the World Health Organizati­on (even in the midst of a pandemic). It should surprise

 ??  ?? For the first time, the World Bank finds that China’s total real income is slightly larger than that of the US. Photograph: SeanPavone­Photo/ Getty Images
For the first time, the World Bank finds that China’s total real income is slightly larger than that of the US. Photograph: SeanPavone­Photo/ Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States