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[OPE-L] China's dilemma
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Title: China's dilemma
COLUMN
China's
dilemma
C.P. CHANDRASEKHAR
China's export success has not only financed real sector growth but
spawned asset bubbles that could trigger a financial crash.
GREG
BAKER/AP
There has been a huge increase in investment in real estate on
account of excess liquidity caused by the burgeoning foreign exchange
reserve.
CHINA'S economic predicament today is unenviable. Its problem is not
that it is experiencing slow growth or is faced with recession, but
that it has grown too fast for too long. Its difficulty is not that it
is strapped for foreign exchange, but that it has an embarrassing
surplus of foreign exchange reserves exceeding a trillion dollars in
value. Its concern is that the export success that had won China the
world's admiration is widening its trade surplus far too much for
comfort.
The paradoxical problem of excessively high, externally driven growth
was flagged mid-April when China's National Bureau of Statistics
announced that growth during the first quarter of 2007 had touched
11.1 per cent relative to the corresponding period of the previous
year, up by 0.7 percentage points, when compared with the last quarter
of 2006. The announcement triggered panic selling in the Shanghai
stock market, resulting in a 4.5 per cent drop in the Shanghai
Composite Index. Coming in the wake of a 9 per cent decline on
February 27, 2007, this "correction" of an index widely held
to be overvalued indicates that the perception is that Chinese growth
must slow.
The reason for that perception is only partly inflation. It is indeed
true that an inflation rate (as measured by the Consumer Price Index)
of 3.3 per cent in March, driven by a 6.2 per cent increase in food
prices, is seen by the Chinese central bank and the Chinese government
as a bit too high for comfort. But inflation rates of this magnitude
are low by global standards, especially when placed in the context of
China's consistently high growth.
The explanation for expectation of a slowdown in growth must therefore
lie elsewhere. One source from which such expectations derive is the
fact that China's exchange rate is under pressure to appreciate. Large
foreign exchange reserves and a rising trade surplus, combined with
large inflows of foreign capital, are a sure-fire recipe for exchange
rate appreciation. China had for long been managing its exchange rate,
keeping it pegged to the dollar. But after pressure to undo the peg
forced the Chinese government to loosen the fixed link between the
renminbi yuan and the dollar, the yuan has appreciated by as much as
6.7 per cent (from 8.2765 yuan to the dollar to 7.7211) between
late-June 2005 and April 27, 2007.
Though this is a minor appreciation given the depreciation of the
dollar vis-à-vis most world currencies, it has implications
for two reasons. First, once the process of appreciation has begun,
preventing further appreciation of the yuan becomes difficult given
the fact that China's rising trade surplus is the focus of the world's
attention. China's trade surplus for the first two months of this year
was about $40 billion, which would have taken it to $240-250 billion
for the whole year. However, there are signs that the appreciation of
the yuan is having some effect. We must recall that China's trade
surplus tripled in 2005 to $102 billion, but rose by only 74 per cent
in 2006. Moreover, on April 12, the People's Daily reported
that China's trade surplus was merely $6.9 billion in March 2007,
reflecting a 38 per cent fall on a year-on-year basis and a 70 per
cent decline from a surplus of $2.4 billion in February. The March
figure represented a 13-month low. What is noteworthy is that the
decline in the trade surplus was not the result of a rise in imports,
which stood at $83.43 billion in March, a rise of only 6.9 per cent
year-on-year.
Dependence on u.s.
market
These signs of a shrinking trade surplus bring us to the second reason
why the effects of the appreciation of the Chinese currency trigger
expectations of a slowdown. This is because of China's heavy
dependence on the U.S. market. According to the International Monetary
Fund's Direction of Trade Statistics, China's exports to the U.S.
accounted for more than a fifth of its exports to the world as a whole
and two-fifths of its exports to industrial countries. If appreciation
of the yuan vis-à-vis the dollar continues, adversely
affecting the country's competitiveness in U.S. markets, export growth
can decelerate further, slowing China's growth.
But, besides the
effects of an appreciating exchange rate, the threat to real sector
growth in China is financial. China's economic success generates and
feeds on a huge expansion in money supply and credit that results from
its rapidly increasing reserves of foreign exchange. Those reserves
are the inevitable corollary of the Chinese government's efforts to
moderate appreciation of the yuan by buying out a large part of the
foreign funds flowing into the country.
As a leader in the Financial Times (January 12, 2007) put it:
"The market intervention needed to hold the renminbi down boosts
domestic liquidity, fuelling asset price bubbles and greatly
complicating the task of economic management." The danger is that
the expansion in credit that fuels real growth is fuelling speculative
real estate and stock market investments that could unwind and
generate a crash.
credit-led
investment
There is reason to believe that credit-financed investment spurs real
growth in China. The investment rate in China (investment as a share
of gross domestic product) has fluctuated between 35 and 44 per cent
over the past 25 years, and has ruled well over 40 per cent in most
recent years. However, what is interesting is the high share of real
estate development in the total, amounting to 17-19 per cent in the
first five years of this decade. This category includes real estate
development by central and local government bodies as well as
investment in residential construction. The former includes investment
in economic development zones and what have come to be referred to as
"image projects" launched by local leaders to beef up their
public stature. The latter includes a substantial amount of private
residential construction that is under way, especially in urban China,
in the wake of relaxation of laws governing residential property
ownership.
It should be expected that the relaxation of residential property
ownership rules must have resulted in the conversion of savings
accumulated in the past into investment in residential property. This
spurt, together with the high degree of volatility of local government
development expenditures, has made real estate development the most
volatile part of fixed assets formation. According to economist
Yongding Yu of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, during the
early 1990s, the growth rate of investment in real estate "varied
between 11.7 and -1.2 per cent".
This kind of volatility is partly facilitated by the manner in which
capital formation is financed in China. Budgetary appropriations and
foreign investment account for small shares of between 8.6 and 11.7
per cent of total fixed assets formation during 2001-2005.
The major finance comes from three sources, all of which involve a
substantial degree of borrowing: domestic loans (17.3 to 20.6 per
cent) and raised funds and others (70-74 per cent). Domestic loans
refer to loans of various forms borrowed by investing units from banks
and non-bank financial institutions. "Raised" funds refer to
extra-budgetary funds received by investing units from Central
government Ministries, local governments, enterprises and institutions
for investment in fixed assets.
And "other funds" refers to funds for investment in fixed
assets received from sources other than those listed above, including
capital raised through issuing bonds by enterprises or financial
institutions, funds raised from individuals, and funds transferred
from other units. All of these involve some degree of direct or
off-budget borrowing.
It is not surprising therefore that excess liquidity created by
China's burgeoning foreign exchange reserves is resulting in a
credit-financed investment and real estate boom. For instance, the
annual rates of growth of property prices stood at 15.1 per cent and
19.5 per cent in 2004 and 2005. The evidence suggests that bank
lending played an important role in this increase in property prices.
The credit exposure of commercial banks to the property and
property-related sectors increased from just 3.6 per cent in 1998 to
14.8 per cent in 2004 and the mortgage loan to total loan ratio
increased from only 0.59 per cent in 1998 to 8.88 per cent in 2005 (Qi
Liang and Hua Cao, Journal of Asian Economics,
2007).
Faced with this
credit-financed speculative boom in the property market, last August
China's Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) announced policies aimed
at tightening bank credit to the real estate sector. Principally,
financial institutions were barred from granting loans to property
development projects whose developers fail to raise 35 per cent of the
investment from their own resources. The policy also tightened lending
to developers suspected of hoarding land and property.
With respect to personal housing mortgage loans, the new policy
required banks to decide on down payments by borrowers on the basis of
their credit worthiness rather than some unified standard. The move
was a clear indication that the government was concerned about
commercial banks falling victim to a real estate bubble gone bust. If
that were to occur, a liquidity crunch could ensue, slowing growth
sharply.
Overall, efforts are on to slow down credit growth by raising reserve
requirements and hiking interest rates. Most recently, on April 29,
2007, the People's Bank of China hiked the reserve requirement of
commercial banks by 50 basis points, to 11 per cent. This increase in
the stipulated reserve ratio is the fourth announced by the central
bank this year and the seventh since last June. The central bank has
also increased interest rates three times in the past year.
To the chagrin of the central bank, this has not put the brakes on
credit growth. Chinese banks are reported to have extended new loans
to the tune of 1.5 trillion yuan ($186.6 billion) in the first quarter
of this year, which was more or less equal to the loans advanced over
seven months from June through December last year.
Stock market
volatility
Credit growth of this kind also seems to underlie stock market
volatility. During one week in April, Chinese retail investors opened
more than 1 million new accounts, taking the total for the previous
four months to more than 10 million, or more than that seen during the
previous four years combined. Not surprisingly, the Financial
Times reports that the Shanghai stock index has been ruling nearly
40 per cent higher so far this year, on top of a 130 per cent increase
last year.
Retail investors began swarming into the stock market in May last
year, after an almost five-year bear run. Part of the reason was a
boom in the market that attracted Chinese households and corporations
holding $4.5 trillion in bank deposits earning less than 3 per cent
per annum. At the current rate of inflation these depositors were
earning negative real returns, which attracted them to the stock
market.
This, of course, implies that if the stock bubble unwinds, many
innocents would burn their fingers. Not surprisingly, China's
policy-makers are concerned that cheap and easy liquidity is fuelling
the boom in the domestic stock market. But the fear remains that any
drastic correction could unwind investments too fast, leading to a
crash. The two sharp downturns in the market have only enhanced those
fears.
In sum, the danger today is that the liquidity built up by China's
external success has not only financed real sector growth but spawned
asset bubbles that could trigger a financial crash. Together with the
effects of the inevitable yuan appreciation, this could set off
China's next growth slowdown.
- Thread context:
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glevy Wed 09 May 2007, 23:59 GMT
- [OPE-L] Monopoly. Friendly reply to Jerry & Michael,
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