China’s Naked Emperors
China’s Naked Emperors
“China became a
powerful giant in past years, but their phenomenal growth is slowing down, do
China authorities really know what they are doing, or the simply rode a lucky
bubble which is about to burst?”
Erreh Svaia
Taken From: http://www.nytimes.com/
By: Paul Krugman
Politicians
who preside over economic booms often develop delusions of competence. You can
see this domestically: Jeb Bush imagines that he knows the secrets of economic
growth because he happened to be governor when Florida was experiencing a giant
housing bubble, and he had the good luck to leave office just before it burst.
We’ve seen it in many countries: I still remember the omniscience and
omnipotence ascribed to Japanese bureaucrats in the 1980s, before the long
stagnation set in.
This is the
context in which you need to understand the strange goings-on in China’s stock
market. In and of itself, the price of Chinese equities shouldn’t matter all
that much. But the authorities have chosen to put their credibility on the line
by trying to control that market — and are in the process of demonstrating
that, China’s remarkable success over the past 25 years notwithstanding, the
nation’s rulers have no idea what they’re doing.
Start with
the fundamentals. China is at the end of an era — the era of superfast growth,
made possible in large part by a vast migration of underemployed peasants from
the countryside to coastal cities. This reserve of surplus labor is now
dwindling, which means that growth must slow.
But China’s
economic structure is built around the presumption of very rapid growth.
Enterprises, many of them state-owned, hoard their earnings rather than return
them to the public, which has stunted family incomes; at the same time,
individual savings are high, in part because the social safety net is weak, so
families accumulate cash just in case. As a result, Chinese spending is
lopsided, with very high rates of investment but a very low share of consumer
demand in gross domestic product.
This
structure was workable as long as torrid economic growth offered sufficient
investment opportunities. But now investment is running into rapidly decreasing
returns. The result is a nasty transition problem: What happens if investment
drops off but consumption doesn’t rise fast enough to fill the gap?
What China
needs are reforms that spread the purchasing power — and it has, to be fair,
been making efforts in that direction. But by all accounts these efforts have
fallen short. For example, it has introduced what is supposed to be a national
health care system, but in practice many workers fall through the cracks.
Meanwhile,
China’s leaders appear to be terrified — probably for political reasons — by
the prospect of even a brief recession. So they’ve been pumping up demand by,
in effect, force-feeding the system with credit, including fostering a stock
market boom. Such measures can work for a while, and all might have been well
if the big reforms were moving fast enough. But they aren’t, and the result is
a bubble that wants to burst.
China’s
response has been an all-out effort to prop up stock prices. Large shareholders
have been blocked from selling; state-run institutions have been told to buy
shares; many companies with falling prices have been allowed to suspend
trading. These are things you might do for a couple of days to contain an
obviously unjustified panic, but they’re being applied on a sustained basis to
a market that is still far above its level not long ago.
What do
Chinese authorities think they’re doing?
In part,
they may be worried about financial fallout. It seems that a number of players
in China borrowed large sums with stocks as security, so that the market’s
plunge could lead to defaults. This is especially troubling because China has a
huge “shadow banking” sector that is essentially unregulated and could easily
experience a wave of bank runs.
But it also
looks as if the Chinese government, having encouraged citizens to buy stocks,
now feels that it must defend stock prices to preserve its reputation. And what
it’s ending up doing, of course, is shredding that reputation at record speed.
Indeed,
every time you think the authorities have done everything possible to destroy
their credibility, they top themselves. Lately state-run media have been
assigning blame for the stock plunge to, you guessed it, a foreign conspiracy
against China, which is even less plausible than you may think: China has long
maintained controls that effectively shut foreigners out of its stock market,
and it’s hard to sell off assets you were never allowed to own in the first
place.
So what
have we just learned? China’s incredible growth wasn’t a mirage, and its
economy remains a productive powerhouse. The problems of transition to lower
growth are obviously major, but we’ve known that for a while. The big news here
isn’t about the Chinese economy; it’s about China’s leaders. Forget everything
you’ve heard about their brilliance and foresightedness. Judging by their
current flailing, they have no clue what they’re doing.



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