China's GDP is $US10.3 trillion –
that's $US8 trillion more than in 2005
Is the Chinese economy slowing down or melting down? You don't have to go
far to find someone purporting to know a lot more about China than you do,
who's making the most apocalyptic predictions.
And who knows? Maybe one day they'll be right. But I'll wait for it to
happen before I start worrying.
By the same
token, to say China is "slowing" seems a bit euphemistic. Being a
developing country you can't say it's in recession the way you might say it of
an advanced economy, because developing economies rarely experience an actual
contraction in real gross domestic product.
At their
worst they just grow at rates that, by their standards, are pretty bad, but by
ours we'd be very pleased to have. In that sense it seems likely China is in or
entering its own version of a recession.
Its rate of growth has been slowing for more than a year, it probably has more
slowing to do, and with a bit of bad luck it could slow a lot more. At worst
we're talking about growth in GDP slowing to maybe 4 per cent a year.
The biggest
problem – as the doomsayers have long been saying – is the "overhang"
from China's long-running real estate boom, in which far more apartments were
built than there were people wanting to buy them.
Now housing
construction has come to a halt in various parts of China, and it won't resume
until the existing stock of empty homes is finally sold off. That could take at
least a year, probably two. So the economy won't start to pick up anytime soon.
Limited
housing construction means weak or declining growth in the manufacture of
housing materials such as crude steel, cement and plate glass.
That's not
the whole story, but it does mean the weakness is concentrated in construction
and manufacturing, which just happen to be the main components of
"industrial production" – an economic indicator the world's financial
markets pay great attention to, not least because it's published monthly.
Trouble is,
industrial production ain't easy to measure. It's particularly hard to do in
developing countries, which don't have the bureaucratic infrastructure we have
and where the shape of the economy keeps changing, not to mention the extra
problems in measuring it monthly rather than quarterly.
This has
prompted some in the markets to suspect a conspiracy rather than a stuff-up,
and allege the Chinese authorities are making the numbers up. They may not be
as reliable as we'd like, but don't believe that.
Another
thing to remember – as people in the market tend to forget – is that industrial
production accounts for only about 45 per cent of Chinese GDP. The remaining 55
per cent is in a lot better shape, as a Reserve Bank assistant governor, Dr
Christopher Kent, argued in a speech this week.
By the way,
if you're looking for someone to trust on China you could do worse than our
central bank. It's well aware of the importance of China to our international
prospects and so puts a lot more personpower than most into studying it: six or
seven economists in Sydney, plus another two attached to our embassy in
Beijing.
Kent says
that although the weakness in China's property and manufacturing sectors is
clearly of concern to commodity exporters like Australia, there are a number of
countervailing forces supporting broader activity in China.
"First,
growth in the services sector [worth about 45 per cent of GDP] has been
resilient, and should continue to be assisted by a shift in demand towards
services as incomes rise," he says.
"Second,
growth in household consumption has also been stable in recent quarters, aided
by the growth in new jobs. Of course, such outcomes cannot be taken for
granted; if the industrial weakness is sustained, it might eventually affect
household incomes and spending.
"Third,
Chinese policymakers have responded to lower growth by easing monetary policy
[access to loans] and approving additional infrastructure investment projects.
"They
have scope to provide further support if needed, although they may be reticent
to do too much if that compromises longer-term goals, such as placing the
financial system on a more sustainable footing."
So what does
this mean for us? The substantial slowing in industrial production has
contributed to the further decline this year in the prices we get for our
exports of coal and iron ore. (Of course, the bigger reason for the lower
prices we're getting is the substantial increase in the supply of these
commodities from places such as Australia.)
Kent says
that what transpires with China's industrial production, and in Asia more
broadly, will have a big influence on how much further commodity prices fall.
And the
changing nature of China's development – a higher proportion of services and
lower proportion of goods – limits the potential for commodity prices to go
back up.
But here's
the good news: Kent reminds us that the shift in demand towards services and
Western agricultural products in China and Asia more broadly presents new
opportunities for Australian exporters.
As recently
as the mid-noughties, China's GDP was growing at the rate of 10 per cent. This
is why money-market types are shocked to hear it's now growing by only 6.5 per
cent, let alone 4 per cent.
But this
just shows that even money-market types can be innumerate. As the distinguished
former economic journalist Anatole Kaletsky has reminded us, China's GDP today
is $US10.3 trillion ($14.5 trillion).
In 2005 it
was $US2.3 trillion. So even just 4 per cent of $US10.3 billion is much more
than 10 per cent of $US2.3 trillion.
To the
Chinese, what matters most is the rate at which GDP is growing. To the
rest of us, however, what matters is the size of the absolute addition the
Chinese are contributing to gross world product.
Ross Gittins is the Herald's economics
editor. Illustration:
Glen Le Lievre
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