Forecasts for China
to surpass the US as the world's main economic power are misplaced. So says an
observer who foresaw Japan's eventual demise a year before its land-price
bubble began to burst.
"The
vulnerabilities in China today are very similar to the vulnerabilities in
Japan," said Roy Smith, 76, who was a Goldman Sachs partner when he wrote
a column saying Japan's rise as a financial hegemon was done. "Nobody
agrees with me. But they didn't agree with me in 1990, so at least I have one
right."
Among the risks:
bad loans, overpriced stocks and a frothy property market are flashing danger
for China's economy and putting pressure on a fragile financial system -
similar to conditions that triggered Japan's fall, said Smith, a finance
professor at New York University's Stern School of Business. A further parallel
is the burden of an aging population, with mounting pension and health-care
costs, he says.
While China probably will avoid
prolonged Japan-style stagnation, a major crisis could expose weaknesses that
aren't apparent now, according to Smith.
"Most people today are
talking about China displacing the United States as the great power of the 21st
century," he said in a telephone interview last week. "My view is
that it is more likely to end up like Japan - that is, the status of a former
would-be superpower that isn't."
China's Rise
China surpassed Japan as the
world's No. 2 economy by gross domestic product in 2010 after three decades of
rapid growth, fuelled by the largest urbanisation in history. It is tipped by
many forecasters eventually to overtake the US in output. By other measures,
such as GDP per person, China is further behind the US
On a per-capita basis, China's
GDP in 2013 was still just half of where Japan was in 1960, according to World
Bank data. That leaves plenty of scope to catch up to rich-world peers, more
optimistic observers say.
"The key difference I see between
China now and Japan in 1990 is that China is at a much lower stage of
development," said Louis Kuijs, chief China economist at Royal Bank of
Scotland Group Plc in Hong Kong, who previously worked at the World Bank.
Even so, China's progress has
confronted mounting challenges in recent years. In 2014, the economy expanded
at the slowest full-year pace in almost a quarter century.
Credit Concerns
The slowdown has thrown a
spotlight on a mounting debt pile that includes souring loans to local
government financing vehicles, or LGFVs, which funded a boom in construction.
Doubts about the creditworthiness of LGFV debt deepened last year, when Premier
Li Keqiang started to pare back implicit guarantees for the regional financing
units.
China's total debt pile,
including borrowing by households, banks, governments and companies, ballooned
to 282 per cent of national output in mid-2014 from 121 per cent in 2000,
according to an estimate by the McKinsey Global Institute.
"The Chinese financial
structure is very fragile because a lot of it is misreported and will reveal a
great deal of weakness when it comes out," said Smith, who specialises in
international banking and finance at the Stern School. "I don't know when
it is going to come out, but when it does it is going to have consequences and
take away a lot of the world's confidence in the Chinese system."
Asiaphoria's End
Former US Treasury Secretary
Lawrence Summers is among those anticipating a further slowdown in China's expansion.
In October he published a paper co-written with fellow Harvard University
economist Lant Pritchett that warned both China's and India's economies are at
risk of a slump because high-growth periods in Asia typically revert to
more-normal expansion rates - often abruptly.
Some signs of stress are already
emerging: Kaisa Group Holdings Ltd., a troubled real-estate developer based in
the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen that must repay billions of dollars in
borrowings this year, rattled investors by missing payment deadlines on a loan
and a bond after the local government blocked several of its projects late last
year.
Rocks, Slime
"They say a rising tide
lifts all boats -- a falling tide reveals all the rocks and slime," said
Smith. 'There was a lot of it in Japan that people did not expect to see."
The former Goldman Sachs
executive doesn't claim to have a flawless forecasting record or to have been
the only one who tipped Japan's economic decline.
Still, his October 1990
predictions on Japan proved prescient. Made amid a tumble in the stock market
that year, they preceded the pricking of the country's property bubble. In a
column in the New York Times, he assessed that Japanese manufacturers would
shift production abroad and that the nation's banks would be impaired by losses
on property loans.
"Japan's extraordinary
economic and financial success has carried the seeds of its own undoing, some
of which have rooted and are now beginning to bloom," Smith wrote at the
time.
He isn't counting on a paradigm
shift out of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's reflation program. Smith sees
"some kind of twilight equilibrium" with economic stagnation and low
inflation.
China's leaders, who gather this
week for an annual session of the national legislature, are trying to
restructure the economy toward domestic demand led by consumption and services
- - away from debt-fueled infrastructure. Economists anticipate a raft of
reforms to state-owned enterprises as part of the push.
"China won't end up in this
peculiar Japanese no man's land between growth and non-growth," Smith
said. "But I do think they could have an economic smash-down that could
really set back the China dream and the China role as a global superpower in
major ways."
Bloomberg
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