China’s phenomenal GDP numbers over the years have not been adjusted for
bad debt and inefficient investment, and thus fail to reflect the true state of
affairs
Estimates by the
National Development and Reform Commission suggest that near to half of the
total investment between 2009 and 2013 was "ineffective".
One consequence of the dramatic Chinese stock market
crash is this: it has hit home that the economy is not all it is made up to be.
There has been economic growth, of course, but there have also been smoke and
mirrors.
Only a few months ago, the Financial Times,
otherwise not an uncritical source, described China as the world's biggest
economy. Today, no serious observer would entertain that kind of fantasy.
There are two main reasons why the size and strength of
the economy have been overestimated. First, the official statistics have been
wrong.
China has been respected, or feared, mainly because of its economic growth.
But there is less strength there than meets the eye - and less reason for both
respect and fear
From about 2010, even official growth rates have been
edging downwards, from about 10 to about 7 per cent. But independent analysts,
such as The Conference Board, Capital Economics and Lombard Street Research,
have found that growth has long been officially overstated and/or that the
decline has been steeper than officially stated, down now to about 4 per cent
or less in annual growth.
Second, there are weaknesses in the economy itself that
have not been recorded statistically. The government has stimulated economic
activity by pouring in cheap credit and directing its enterprises to turn that
credit into a stream of investments, some sound and some bad. The gross
domestic product numbers record all of the economic activity but do not adjust
realistically for the burden of bad debt and investments.
If you borrow money to build highways that are never used or apartments
that are never lived in, that's not investment that creates real capital.
Estimates by researchers at China's National Development
and Reform Commission, an official agency, suggest that near to half of the
total investment in the economy between 2009 and 2013 was
"ineffective". Their research also found that investment efficiency
has fallen sharply in recent years, which means the economy gets steadily less
additional growth for every unit of additional investment, to the effect that
annual growth in the relevant period, corrected for ineffective investment,
would be 2 to 3 percentage points lower than in the official statistics.
If you dig holes in the ground and fill them up again,
that's economic activity without anything being produced. If you borrow money
to build highways that are never used or apartments that are never lived in,
that's not investment that creates real capital.
Building an unnecessary airport creates demand for steel,
concrete, glass and the like, and jobs are created. But once the airport is
there with little traffic, it becomes a drain on the economy. It has to be kept
in service for little or no business, or abandoned.
During the growth period, China has had a steady flow of
such ineffective investments. That has notched up the GDP numbers to artificial
levels. The numbers have not always been "incorrect" but neither have
they reflected real economic strength.
There has been economic growth in China, of course, but there have also
been smoke and mirrors.
Part of the reason why measured growth has been falling
recently is that the burden of debt and ineffective investment has been
accumulating and has caught up with the real economy, and come to weigh more
heavily in the balance. The new figures are lower partly because real growth is
down but partly also because the previous exaggerated figures are no longer
statistically maintained.
False economies are not exclusive to China, but one of
the ways in which the Chinese state-investment-driven economy is different is
that it has more and bigger false economies than usual. The more realistic way
of reassessing the economy is to ask what real strength it has rather than just
how the numbers add up. That way of approaching it unavoidably leads to a
downwards adjustment.
Now that the world is coming to know Xi Jinping and his
group, the West is engaged in a reassessment of the Chinese regime. That
reassessment should start from the economic foundations. China has been
respected, or feared, mainly because of its economic growth. But there is less
strength there than meets the eye - and less reason for both respect and fear.
Stein Ringen is
emeritus professor at the University of Oxford.
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