China’s new growth order

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#1
To share an article on China economic, which worth a read...

China’s new growth order

Between 1978 and 2012, China’s GDP grew at an average annual rate of about 10 per cent — from US$341 billion (S$438 billion) to US$8.3 trillion (at 2012 prices) — lifting more than 500 million Chinese out of poverty in the process.

Much of this was due to an export-led industrialisation and urbanisation strategy that opened up new opportunities in the rapidly expanding cities, where labour, capital, technology and infrastructure came together to form supply capacities for global markets. According to the McKinsey Global Institute, by 2025, 29 of the world’s 75 most dynamic cities will be in China.

But this urban-based, export-led growth model also created more challenges than it can now handle: Property bubbles, traffic jams, pollution, unsustainable local government debt, land-related corruption and social unrest related to unequal access to social welfare. As a result, a shift towards a new consumption-based growth model — one that emphasises stability, inclusiveness, and sustainability — is at the top of China’s agenda. China is searching for a new “growth order” for its restlessly expanding cities.

THE NEGLECTED HUMAN DIMENSION

The current economic-growth model considers the configuration of key factors of production — land, labour, capital and total factor productivity (a measure of efficiency). But this narrow focus on output neglects the economy’s human dimension — that is, how growth affects ordinary Chinese citizens.

A growth order, by contrast, implies an emphasis on the configuration of sociopolitical and economic institutions — including norms, procedures, laws and enforcement mechanisms — to achieve social objectives, such as improved living standards, a healthier natural environment, and a harmonious and innovative society.

The growth order’s stability will depend on institutionalised and effective coordination between the state, the market and society — a major challenge, given the divergent interests within and among these groups. But, more important, much of the growth order’s effectiveness will depend on the relationship between the central and local governments in the delivery of public services for the market.

Indeed, contrary to popular belief outside China, the Chinese state is not monolithic; it is a highly complex bureaucracy with many layers of government and quasi-government institutions that do not always conform to central directives. The central government is in charge of national or systemic interests, deploying legal, regulatory, and broad monetary and fiscal policies to achieve its ends. But the state interacts with private enterprises, individuals and civil society mainly through local governments and local offices of national regulatory agencies.

PAROCHIAL LOCAL INTERESTS

A distinctive feature of the Chinese growth order is that local governments compete actively against each other for jobs, revenue, investment, and access to fiscal and human resources. This is because local government leaders are appointed centrally, and, until recently, promotion has been based largely on the ability to generate GDP growth at the local level, leading to over-investment in the economy as a whole.

Hence, the interplay between local and central governments is complex, particularly in terms of revenue sharing and responsibility for providing public services. Although the central government may be committed to reforms, implementation at the local level can be very uneven, owing to parochial and vested interests.

For example, since 2008, when the central authorities tried to boost growth to combat the global crisis, local governments expanded their investment capacity through shadow-banking vehicles that sought to circumvent restraints on bank credit.

Because local governments receive 50 per cent of total national fiscal revenue, but account for 85 per cent of total fiscal expenditure, they try to supplement their budgets through land sales. In 2012, local governments received 2.9 trillion yuan (S$607.8 billion) in revenue from land and property sales, compared with 6.1 trillion yuan in other local revenue.

TO CURB OVER-INVESTMENT

Compared to the private sector, local governments and state-owned enterprises tend to have access to significantly cheaper funding, with the gap between official interest rates and shadow-banking borrowing costs reaching as much as 10 percentage points.

Cheap funding and land revenue have led to excess infrastructure and industrial capacity without adequate market discipline. From 2008 to 2012, fixed-asset investment amounted to 136 trillion yuan — or 2.6 times more than the country’s 2012 GDP.

Rebalancing the economy by shifting towards domestic consumption and avoiding over-investment will require major fiscal and monetary reforms, as well as structural reforms to delineate land-use rights more clearly.

It will also require revising the framework for revenue sharing between central and local governments, as well as transparency in local-government finance.

These reforms stand at the centre of the state-market debate, because the private sector, caught in the complex interplay between central-local power sharing, can easily be crowded out. Thus, creating a new growth order requires the central government to align institutional structures and incentives so that local governments and the market can play to their strengths. The market must be allowed the space to innovate, while the state must implement the necessary institutional and procedural reforms.

Striking the right balance between market-based product innovation and state-led institutional innovation will be the main challenge that China faces in the years ahead. PROJECT SYNDICATE

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

Andrew Sheng, President of the Fung Global Institute, is a former Chairman of the Hong Kong Securities and Futures Commission, and is currently an adjunct professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing. Xiao Geng is Director of Research at the Fung Global Institute.

http://www.todayonline.com/chinaindia/ch...owth-order
“夏则资皮,冬则资纱,旱则资船,水则资车” - 范蠡
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#2
To quote Wen, a small problem multiplied by 1bio is a big problem

The objective of initial expansion phase was simple: job creation. No jobs no food no housing will be a big problem when you have 500m people moving to the cities. That phase is over in 2011 when urban population for the 1st time exceed rural.

Deng's objective of 十年翻一番 has been achieved and likely will be achieved in this admin. That is the reason why 7% growth is almost guaranteed based on the simple 72 rule.

Now China needs to reform from quantity to quality. The lack in quality for China products was a necessary evil in the bigger scheme of things. We will likely see pretty dramatic economic changes in this and next admin as China moves from developing to developed; focusing on quality and domestic consumption and as RMB becomes reserve currency

So despite all the criticism I really think China outperformed expectations the past 30 years and they had stayed on course.
Before you speak, listen. Before you write, think. Before you spend, earn. Before you invest, investigate. Before you criticize, wait. Before you pray, forgive. Before you quit, try. Before you retire, save. Before you die, give. –William A. Ward

Think Asset-Business-Structure (ABS)
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#3
(23-08-2013, 10:23 AM)specuvestor Wrote: To quote Wen, a small problem multiplied by 1bio is a big problem

The objective of initial expansion phase was simple: job creation. No jobs no food no housing will be a big problem when you have 500m people moving to the cities. That phase is over in 2011 when urban population for the 1st time exceed rural.

Deng's objective of 十年翻一番 has been achieved and likely will be achieved in this admin. That is the reason why 7% growth is almost guaranteed based on the simple 72 rule.

Now China needs to reform from quantity to quality. The lack in quality for China products was a necessary evil in the bigger scheme of things. We will likely see pretty dramatic economic changes in this and next admin as China moves from developing to developed; focusing on quality and domestic consumption and as RMB becomes reserve currency

So despite all the criticism I really think China outperformed expectations the past 30 years and they had stayed on course.

Fully agree. During the reform from export-based to consumption-based, there should also be "reform" on the growth story of companies base on China... IMO

Time for research to prepare for treasure hunt(s)...Big Grin
“夏则资皮,冬则资纱,旱则资船,水则资车” - 范蠡
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