A man on a bicycle stands in front of an electronic board
showing Shanghai stock index, Nikkei share price index, and Dow Jones
Industrial Average outside a brokerage in Tokyo on Sept. 22, 2022. (Kim
Kyung-Hoon/Reuters)
By Fan Yu
June 18, 2023 Updated: June 20, 2023
Commentary
At the beginning of the year, many economists
had predicted that the COVID “great re-opening” of China would spur domestic
spending and the consumer sector.
Following years of periodic lockdowns, the
hope is that consumers would roar out of the gates to offset slowdowns in
traditional growth areas such as manufacturing and real estate.
But after a brief first quarter of economic
growth, the wheels have come off the Chinese economy.
The most recent economic data from May showed
that metrics have all deteriorated across the board, from youth unemployment to
retail sales, real estate prices, and capital investments, according to
official data from the National Bureau of Statistics.
And if the official statistics are so bad,
there’s reason to believe that the real economic picture may be even worse.
Weak consumer spending is especially worrisome
as the traditional levers to spur growth have all stalled and there are few
levers the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) can pull. Retail sales, which ING Bank
called “the only functioning engine of Chinese growth,” is floundering.
“And although the year-on-year growth rate of
12.7% looks impressive, this equates to a seasonally adjusted decrease in
month-on-month sales and shows that the re-opening momentum is falling,” wrote
Robert Carnell, ING’s head of research in Asia-Pacific, in a note to clients.
There are numerous causes of this, including
consumer pessimism, unemployment, and an exodus of wealth.
Youth unemployment among the ages of 16-24 is
at its highest level on record, sitting above 20 percent as of April 2023. This
has caused social stability issues for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) ruling
regime. Older consumers have more cash, but have become more pessimistic about
the future of the country and are pulling back their purse strings.
In addition, China is losing a lot of wealth
due to migration. Around 13,500 dollar-millionaires are expected to leave China
this year, after 10,800 such individuals (and their families) migrated out of
China in 2022, according to data from consultant Henley & Partners. Those
are the biggest wealth losses among any country in the world.
Top CCP officials have been so concerned about
the nation’s economic situation that they are soliciting advice from business
leaders on how to boost growth. At least six consultation sessions have been
held in recent weeks with business leaders, according to Bloomberg News, citing
people familiar with the matter.
Among the topics discussed were how to
stimulate the economy, how to boost private sector spending, and how to
revitalize the real estate market. And among the suggestions proposed was to
introduce more elements of a market-based economy rather than a planned
economy—a hallmark of communism.
“Officials acknowledged China’s economy was
facing a critical period and displayed an impetus to finding solutions they
hadn’t seen before,” according to the Bloomberg report.
While these solution-finding sessions aren’t
necessarily foreign to a Western audience, they are uncommon for the CCP and
underscore the dire situation facing China’s economy.
The usual economic stimulus measures from
CCP’s playbook are all on the table. These include interest-rate reductions,
bank reserve requirement cuts, and loosening restrictions on real estate
development.
The People’s Bank of China on June 13 lowered
the short-term rates (standing lending facility, or SLF) by 10 basis points, or
0.1 percent to spur lending activities. And on June 15, it also cut the
one-year medium-term lending facility (MLF) by 10 basis points from 2.75 to
2.65 percent.
But those traditional methods of stimulus have
a lesser effect today due to their widespread use over the prevailing two
decades.
For example, the CCP has already encouraged
bank lending so much that further loosening of regulatory reins would put its
banking sector in peril. The property market, which already accounts for over
70 percent of China’s household wealth and 25 percent of its GDP, is already
overallocated as a contributor to the economy. Those with the means to buy
homes already have multiple homes, most of which are sitting empty. Further
stimulus could encourage wild fluctuations in periods of distress and cause
undue harm to household wealth and further hamper consumer spending.
After years of encouraging infrastructure
spending, local and regional governments are out of cash and already facing
defaults. There’s simply very little need for more highways, bridges, and
tunnels in a country that has been overbuilding them to spur growth.
All of this makes the CCP’s full-year target
of 5 percent GDP growth an impossible goal to meet.
Views
expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
https://www.theepochtimes.com/chinese-economy-now-in-deep-peril_5340527.html
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