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China policy: shifting the spotlight from tech

China appears to have changed tack on the technology sector. ‘Barbaric growth’ is giving way to something more sober, considered and cognisant of the risks. This shift in approach has much in common with other economies and reflects a range of factors including concerns about monopoly power and data security.

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This policy shift appears to be structural and the macroeconomic implications are substantial.

"If technology is unable to sustain China’s high rate of growth, the focus will shift back to manufacturing and consumption.”

The technology sector has been one of the bright spots of growth in China for the past five years, accounting for nearly 1 percentage point of gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2018. While a slowdown shouldn’t be a surprise, the vigour of the shift in policy targeting the tech sector is worth paying attention to.

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If technology is unable to sustain China’s high rate of growth, the focus will shift back to manufacturing and consumption. But both are facing structural challenges of their own.

Consistent

The 14th Five-Year Plan has an objective to “maintain the manufacturing share in GDP stable”. This would be a material improvement from recent decades which has seen China’s manufacturing sector consistently declining as a share of GDP.

But China’s climate commitments are a new, and very substantial, constraint on the manufacturing sector. A Bank of International Settlements (BIS) study maps data from 121 countries between 1971 and 2016 and finds carbon emissions rise with economic development, manufacturing activity and urbanisation. All three have been part of China’s enviable economic performance over recent decades.

In March, the five-year plan called for China to reduce energy intensity by 13.5 per cent by 2025. The establishment of a research centre on Xi Jinping’s Thoughts on Ecological Civilisation under the auspices of the Ministry of Ecology and Environment suggests a commitment at the most senior levels.

While countries have decoupled carbon emissions from GDP growth, almost all were growing slowly. Moreover, decoupling emissions and GDP on a single-country basis is easier than all countries reducing emissions together. A single country can ‘outsource’ its climate unfriendly production to jurisdictions with weaker environmental standards.

OECD countries as a group are net importers of carbon, relative to what is produced domestically. One study of nearly 2,000 multinational firms headquartered in 48 countries found firms’ emission levels are significantly higher abroad if environmental regulation is more stringent at home. China itself may well have been the recipient of such production in the past.

Commitment

China’s climate commitments are a major new constraint on the growth of the industrial sector. The household sector has long been proffered as the source of future growth. Households can contribute through lower savings and/or if aggregate household income rises.

The savings rate has fallen from 52 per cent of GDP in 2008 to 44 per cent. This decline corresponded with a period when China’s rate of growth more than halved, showing even a falling saving rate won’t insulate China from its structural headwinds. Further declines in the saving rate may be possible but structural constraints suggest these will be modest.

With the one-child policy in having been in place between 1979 and 2015, many retirees will need to fund their own retirement rather than relying on their children to provide both care and financial support. China’s working age population is already shrinking and some studies suggest the population will peak by 2025, at the latest, well ahead of previous expectations.

One solution to both aging and the paucity of official retirement support is to raise China’s retirement ages. At 60 for men, 55 for female government workers and 50 for other females, these are currently low. But as Peking Universith finance professor Michael Pettis points out, China’s unique demographic and social structures mean older people are an important source of social support. If they spend more time at work, it will act as an even greater demographic disincentive for young families.

Perhaps reflecting these structural constraints, the Ministry of Commerce’s recently published Five-Year Plan for Commerce Development contains projections for retail sales only growing at 5 per cent annually for the next five years, down from 10 per cent in the last five-year plan.

Constraint

Against these sectoral restrictions, the economy also faces aggregate macro policy constraints. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) puts China’s augmented public debt at 96 per cent of GDP and on track to eclipse 100 per cent of GDP by 2025. In common with many countries, China’s fiscal capacity is limited.

China’s monetary policy easing has been very substantial during the pandemic. BIS data show non-financial debt rising from 263 per cent of GDP at the end of 2019 to 290 per cent of GDP by the first quarter of 2021. This is lower than advanced economies but it is very high for an emerging economy and has been a policy target for some years.

This structural concern about the build-up of debt is one reason China shifted towards a more prudent monetary policy stance in the third quarter of 2020. But China’s recovery hasn’t been as vigorous as hoped and the result has been a step towards renewed easing through a reduction in bank reserve requirement ratios.

While China will continue to grow more quickly than many other countries, risk-driven constraints on the tech sector, demographic constraints on consumption, climate constraints on manufacturing, and macro constraints on monetary and fiscal policy suggest the economy is facing another downshift to a slower growth path.

Richard Yetsenga is Chief Economist at ANZ

The views and opinions expressed in this communication are those of the author and may not necessarily state or reflect those of ANZ.

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