Nobody here but us chickens
China is about to pay the price for its
breakneck commitment to growth
China’s 135 percent corporate-debt-to-GDP ratio is the highest among the
world’s major economies. Together with the country’s pro-cyclical fiscal
structure and 30 percent overcapacity across the board in manufacturing, the
country’s GDP could slow to below 4 percent as early as 2017, despite promises
by the leadership to maintain a target of 7 percent.
That corporate debt ratio is now a whopping 81 percent
larger than that of the US. Figures released by Standard & Poor show that
in mid-2014, debt amounted to US$14.2 trillion. In comparison, US
corporate debt is US$13.1 trillion, about 75 percent of estimated 2014 GDP.
The country owes such gargantuan corporate debt to the profligate
over-leveraging predicated by systemic unaccountability, an institutional insidiousness
intrinsic to the largely state-owned banking sector, the mammoth state-owned
enterprise sector, and an altogether unsound system of financial markets.
The magnitude of China’s existing property glut and industrial
overcapacity proportionate to its GDP are unprecedented in world economic
history. From all the colossal amounts of vacant properties everywhere in China
and the overcapacity that has brought corporate profit margins down to perilous
levels, a sizable portion of China’s high GDP growth figures, in the past, were
procured by hugely wasteful investment.
But all this waste actually achieved one thing: success in fooling
people across the globe to to picture China’s past double-digit GDP growth as a
miraculous economic accomplishment. In truth, much has been a Faustian bargain
that brought about dazzling short-term gains at the expense of long-run,
sustainable growth.
In recent years, a sizable portion of GDP derived from China’s hugely
oversupplied properties, superfluous infrastructure and idle manufacturing
facilities constituted a vastly wasteful component of GDP, a sort of “Empty
Calorie” GDP. Not only does this not contribute to improved economy, it
constitutes “negative equity”. It is not only that there is no revenue
generated from all these idled assets, the investor entities need to pay
interest expenses for them every day. A prevalent risk-dyslexic mentality of
the past decades has impelled the system to now strain at the seams.
A multitude of information is hidden in the layers of China’s economy
from materials published only in Chinese, in print and on Chinese-language
websites, and previously not accessible to the English-speaking world.
For instance, Xia Bin, a former director at the Center for Development
Research of China’s State Council in Beijing, in November 2014 revealed that
overcapacity is about 30 percent across the board in China’s industries. Thus,
on average, capacity utilization is only about 70 percent, resulting in
shockingly low profit margins for most manufacturing industries. Xia said one tonne of steel gives a profit of
less than one renminbi (US16¢). The profit on one tonne of coal is not enough
to buy a bottle of mineral water. Ominous drops in corporate profit margins
necessarily feed into future drags in consumer spending, and economic growth in
general.
Numerous China studies in the English-speaking world have failed to
investigate these problems. Vacant properties and idle capacity are so vast
that it is estimated that 75 percent of all commercial properties already built
are now vacant, and will stay vacant for an extended period of time.
What caused the pervasive, grave problem of overcapacity? It is the
institutional insidiousness in China’s contorted semi-market system: Xia Bin
noted that it is an outcome stemming from the fact that almost every one of
China’s local governments in the past decade engaged in an array of blind
pursuits in what was seen as the “strategic industries.”
Local governments pushed forward enormous amounts of expansion in those
industries and ended up with wasteful overcapacity nationwide. For decades,
China’s mammoth State-Owned Enterprise (SOE) sector was being fed with negative
real interest rates – lower than the actual inflation rate of the time – on
loans from state-owned banks. The SOEs’ blind expansion was fueled by
ultra-low-cost funds, together with local government’s blind pursuit to boost
short-run GDP. Now the consequences are surfacing.
In his speech Xia Bin also acknowledged that as overleveraging in the
past resulted in huge indebtedness, the current practices of debt roll-over
that China’s banks have played for the SOEs and local governments are actually
equivalent to Ponzi schemes.
All this may lead to continued cuts in China’s GDP growth to an extent
unimaginable to most observers in the west. For years, obscured by comparisons
made with the other major economies, in terms of total debt (that is, both
corporate and non-corporate debts), a majority of observers have not been able
to visualize the relevance of China’s corporate debt in its size and its ratio
to GDP, as to the probable impact on the country’s economic future.
This lack of awareness of how China’s mounting corporate debt may play a
crucial role in negating prospects for the country’s economic future is also
consequential to the lack of understanding of the untoward designs in China’s
systems. China’s fiscal fragility is prescribed in an intrinsic institutional
peculiarity. How this may contribute to a circular causation in economic
downturns is now due for a closer look.
Another pivotal factor that will also greatly contribute to lowering
economic growth is China’s peculiar fiscal structure. Anyone who grew up in the
more developed countries in the world will be startled to learn that, in China,
only about 24 million people, 1.76 percent of the entire population, pay income
taxes. Failing to recognize this institutional peculiarity is to fail to see
how China’s fiscal structure is uniquely fragile in economic downturns (as
government revenues are disproportionately pro-cyclical), and the nation’s
economy is prone to destabilization in economic downturns.
Unfortunately, hitherto economic research done on China almost
invariably has failed to take into account the country’s inversely skewed
fiscal structure. That fewer than 2 percent of the population pay income tax
is, among other things, data not accessible to people who do not read Chinese.
Being bilingual, this author has access to much vital information about China’s
systems not being made available to the English-speaking world.
Arguably numerous studies about China have not been able to recognize
the primacy of this peculiar institutional feature intrinsic to China’s system,
and hence (with many of them) the parameters they established and their outlook
thus formulated, may prove fundamentally erroneous.
The Fiscal Reality that China now faces, is the combination of a
disproportionately pro-cyclical fiscal structure (a meager income-tax base, and
overly reliant on sales and corporate taxes) that necessitates drastic decrease
in tax revenues in this economic downturn, plus the inescapable, hiatus
reductions in local government revenue from state land (user rights) sales.
These are the combined pivotal factors that numerous China studies in the west
have actually entirely overlooked, or failed to identify.
Such is the double whammy now starting to impact China’s economy.
Corroborating this is a comment made in early 2015 by the chief China economist
at Deutsche Bank, who warned that China is likely facing the worst fiscal
challenge in three decad
The second factor is that state land sales have contributed to about 60
percent of local government revenues in the past five years. This key revenue
surce is now fast shrinking with the set trend of a slumping property market.
The Faustian consequences stemming from how the monetizing of state lands were
being done in longer than the past decade are now starting to surface.
First of two excerpts from “China’s Faustian Bargains: China’s Economy
Seen in the Undercurrent of Organized Unaccountability”, published by Praxia
and available on Amazon in paperback and Kindle. The author, trained in
economics, accounting, and business law, has for 25 years worked in
international business/finance relating to Asia, and China specifically.
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