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China’s Fiscal Stimulus Exceeds 2020 Levels, Barclays Says

Mista

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China’s fiscal stimulus this year now tops the amount issued in 2020, according to Barclays Plc., as the government boosts spending, especially on infrastructure, to bolster a faltering economy.

Barclays estimates the shortfall on the broadest measure of the budget -- known as the augmented fiscal deficit -- amounts to 9.2% of gross domestic product this year, compared with 8.4% in 2020.

“This suggests aggregate fiscal policy supports have already exceeded the stimulus seen in 2020,” the Barclays analysts wrote.

China’s been counting on an expansion of government spending to support economic growth this year as business confidence has been hit by Covid curbs and other headwinds. That, coupled with massive tax breaks it offered to business at the expense of government income, resulted in the ballooning deficit, which Beijing hopes should add more to aggregate demand in the economy.

The broad fiscal deficit had already widened to 6 trillion yuan ($833 billion) in the first eight months of the year, a fresh record, and 50% bigger than the 4 trillion yuan recorded in the same period in 2020, according to Bloomberg calculations based on Ministry of Finance data. The shortfall was 1.1 trillion yuan in January-August last year.

China’s Stimulus: All the Steps Taken Recently to Boost Economy

China has announced several support measures this year to shore up growth as Covid restrictions and a property crisis take their toll on the economy. Much of the stimulus has been focused on boosting infrastructure investment, such as 1 trillion yuan announced in August.

Andrew Polk at consultancy Trivium earlier this month pegged the size of China’s fiscal stimulus in 2022 at nearly 10 trillion yuan, or roughly 7% of GDP.

Barclays economists led by Jian Chang said in the report they don’t expect any “new big fiscal stimulus” for the rest of the year, adding the “focus of fiscal policy now is implementation rather than new stimulus.”

The government is borrowing more to fund the spending, with more than $340 billion of bonds expected to be sold in the fourth quarter, according to Bloomberg calculations.

Premier Li Keqiang this week said the final three months of the year would be key to the nation’s economic recovery, according to a report in state media. He said many already announced policies are expected to have greater impact in that period.

 
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The broad fiscal deficit had already widened to 6 trillion yuan ($833 billion) in the first eight months of the year, a fresh record, and 50% bigger than the 4 trillion yuan recorded in the same period in 2020, according to Bloomberg calculations based on Ministry of Finance data. The shortfall was 1.1 trillion yuan in January-August last year.

China Budget Deficit Keeps Widening Under Covid, Property Crisis


China’s broad fiscal deficit widened to a fresh record in the first eight months of the year as land sales continued to drop while efforts to contain Covid outbreaks added to the spending burden.

The deficit in the budgets for all levels of government was 6 trillion yuan ($857 billion), according to Bloomberg calculations based on data from the Ministry of Finance released Friday. That is a new high for any comparable period and compares with a shortfall of 1.1 trillion yuan in January-August last year and a gap of 4 trillion yuan at the same point in 2020.

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The data show the fiscal strain faced by the government is yet to ease, even though the dent in income from this year’s massive tax breaks has started to taper while the economy showed some signs of recovery in August. The imbalance could lead governments at different levels to cut expenditure and limit their ability to spur economic growth.

Covid lockdowns over the summer and power shortages have forced factories, restaurants and shopping malls to shut, weighing on tax revenue generation. Income from land sales continued to drop as a property market crisis persists.

In the meantime, spending needs are rising as China intensifies Covid curbs in the run-up to the 20th Communist Party congress, a once-in-five-years meeting where President Xi Jinping is due to secure a precedent-breaking third term in office. For instance, local governments have been asked to test residents regularly for coronavirus, regardless of infection levels.

AUG.JULYJUNEMAYAPRILMARCHFEB.
YEAR-TO-DATE2022202220222022202220222022
BILLION YUAN
Augmented fiscal balance-6,020-5,245-5,052-2,970-2,056-1,250309
General public budget balance-2,713-2,177-2,367-1,232-664-155798
General public revenue13,80412,49810,5228,6747,4296,2044,620
General public expenditure16,51814,67512,8899,9068,0936,3593,823
Gov. fund balance-3,306-3,068-2,686-1,738-1,392-1,095-488
Gov. fund revenue3,9983,3382,7972,1951,7571,384916
Gov. fund spending7,3046,4065,4833,9333,1492,4791,404
Note: A positive number for balance means surplus, while a negative figure indicates deficit. Source: Ministry of Finance

Income from general public and government funds combined came in at 17.8 trillion yuan in January to August. General public revenue fell 8% from a year earlier, slowing from a 9.2% drop in the first seven months. It would have risen 3.7% had it not been for the tax rebates, the finance ministry said.

The government doled out more than 2.3 trillion yuan in tax breaks in the first half, nearly 90% of the relief planned for this year, according to Bloomberg calculations based on MOF data.

Revenue from the sale of land dropped 28.5% on year in the first eight months of 2022 to 3.4 trillion yuan, compared with a 31.7% slump in January-July.

Total spending was 23.8 trillion yuan. It includes 16.5 trillion yuan in general fiscal expenditure, which covers education, healthcare, defense and scientific research. That was up 6.3% on year, compared with a gain of 6.4% in the January-July period. Expenditure under the government fund budget rose 23.4%, down from a 29.8% jump in the first seven months.

Other highlights of the MOF release:

  • Income from deed taxes, which are paid when a property is bought or sold, fell 28.7% on year in January-August
  • Tax revenue from vehicle purchases slumped 30.5% in the period, as a policy to halve the levy paid on some new passenger cars continued to cause an impact
  • Revenue from taxes on corporate and individual income gained 2.5% and 8.9%, respectively
  • State-owned land use right transfer expenditure, a part of which is invested in infrastructure, fell 12.2% to 3.9 trillion yuan
 
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Budget deficit do not really matters so long your debt to GDP ratio is low and/or deficit vs GDP is low.

China can easily ask whole world to fund Chinese state today by hiking VAT. Since China is world factory, whole world got to PAY.

This is something no western economist wants to talk about.
 
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Barclays estimates the shortfall on the broadest measure of the budget -- known as the augmented fiscal deficit -- amounts to 9.2% of gross domestic product this year, compared with 8.4% in 2020.

The deficit in the budgets for all levels of government was 6 trillion yuan ($857 billion), according to Bloomberg calculations based on data from the Ministry of Finance released Friday. That is a new high for any comparable period and compares with a shortfall of 1.1 trillion yuan in January-August last year and a gap of 4 trillion yuan at the same point in 2020.


China’s fiscal woes highlighted as local authorities turn to fines, traffic tickets to boost revenues


A 66,000 yuan (US$9,525) fine for selling substandard celery and a 300,000 yuan (US$43,300) penalty for “jacking up” the price of potatoes may sound extreme.

But unreasonable heavy fines have become an increasingly common measure as local governments in China seek to bring in much needed revenue, revealing the tip of the iceberg for China’s fiscal predicament.

As a grim outlook looms for China’s economy in the face of multiple headwinds, local authorities already stretched thin by the seemingly never ending coronavirus outbreaks are struggling to keep their fiscal balance sheets clean. Revenues fell short of expenditure in all of mainland China’s 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions in the first half of the year.

As China’s economic growth lags, authorities have been struggling with slashed revenues resulting from the property sector slump as well as tax rebates they need to pay as part of efforts to help virus-hit businesses.

They are also struggling under the burden of increased expenditures caused largely by coronavirus-related spending, including the costs of mass testing and social restrictions.

Slowdowns in local economies have led to declining tax revenues from corporations, and in the first seven months of the year, income from the crucial source fell by 13.8 per cent from a year earlier to 10.27 trillion yuan (US$1.48 trillion), according to the Ministry of Finance.

“The massive tax cuts and rebates this year aimed to support businesses came at the expense of local public finance, with value-added tax, an important source of revenue, down by more than 40 per cent,” said Xu Tianchen, an economist with The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU).

Land sale revenue, a major local government financing tool which usually accounts for a third to a half of revenues, fell by a record 31.7 per cent during the first seven months of the year.

“The current downturn in the property market means that local governments couldn’t count on land sales to fill the fiscal gap,” Xu added.

Slashed revenues and an increase in expenditure left China with a 5.3 trillion yuan deficit in the first seven months of the year, with coronavirus-related expenses seen as a major contributor.

Financial toll from China’s zero-Covid policy hangs over local services

21 Aug 2022

Goldman Sachs estimated in May that testing 70 per cent of the population every two days would cost as much as US$370 billion, or 2.2 per cent of China’s economic output last year.

Soochow Securities estimated that the cost of regular coronavirus tests in all first and second-tier cities would cost as much as 1.7 trillion yuan a year, accounting for 8.7 per cent of public expenditure, or 1.5 per cent of China’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2021.

Provinces including Sichuan, Shaanxi and Yunnan have all started to charge people for virus tests, although it still remains free for most of the country.

China is standing dangerously on the verge of an economic decline after its GDP grew by a mere 0.4 per cent in the second quarter.

Growth forecasts for China’s economy this year have been slashed by global investment banks to between 2.6 and 3.3 per cent, while Beijing has already conceded that its annual growth target of “around 5.5 per cent” may be missed.

And in the second half of the year, the task to lift economic growth is largely in the hands of the local governments while China has been ramping up infrastructure spending.

In the first seven months of the year, infrastructure investment grew by 7.4 per cent, with outlay on water conservancy projects growing by 71.4 per cent over the same period compared to last year, Ministry of Finance data showed.

Meanwhile, this year’s central government transfer quota to local authorities has almost been used up, along with the quota for special purpose bonds dedicated to fund infrastructure projects, meaning Beijing has little more help to offer.

“Local governments should tighten their belts, put existing assets to better use, maintain a balance between revenue and expenditure, and guarantee fiscal spending to ensure people’s livelihoods,” Premier Li Keqiang said in a meeting last month.

Weakened revenue growth momentum is likely to lead to more front-loaded spending measures for local governments to shore up the economy, said Susan Chu, senior director at S&P Global Ratings.

“We expect the fiscal deficit over total revenues for China’s local governments to be 20 to 25 per cent for 2022, compared with 11 per cent in 2021 and 16 per cent in 2020.
“Over the longer term, we anticipate the goal to contain fiscal risks will be prioritised over the need to boost growth through investment.

“We believe the central government is unlikely to significantly increase the quota for new bond issuance by local governments, which would force them to run down internal cash or liquid assets.

“The reduced liquidity buffer and fewer fiscal resources point to spending cuts, and will likely exert secondary impact on the local economy.”

Since last year, a growing number of cities have been banking on fines to increase their fiscal revenue.

China to sell US$230 billion of local debt as fiscal income slumps

18 Aug 2022

According to public data compiled by the Guangzhou-based Southern Weekly newspaper, last year local government revenue from fines and money confiscated from illegal sources including pyramid schemes increased in 80 out of 111 cities, representing 72 per cent.

Revenue from fines and confiscations more than doubled in 15 cities, with Leshan in Sichuan province rising by 155 per cent. Nanchang, the capital city of Jiangxi province, saw its revenues increase by 151 per cent.

Last month, a grocer in Yulin, Shaanxi province, was fined 66,000 yuan (US$9,525) by local authorities for selling 2.5kg (5.5lbs) of substandard celery for 20 yuan (US$2.9).
Last year, Yulin collected 58.7 billion yuan in revenue, while spending 80 billion yuan, pushing its debt ratio to 123 per cent.

In Daqing in the northern province of Heilongjiang, a potato vendor was fined 300,000 yuan (US$43,300) for “jacking up” his prices by over 66 per cent after charging 4 yuan per kilogram, according to public records and state and local media reports.

In 2021, the total fiscal expenditure was nearly twice as much as the fiscal revenue in Daqing, while the local government debt ratio stood at 266 per cent.

The excessive fines occurred because local governments still have too large outlays, but have much less at their disposal, added Xu from The EIU.

“Given the depressed economic outlook, the fiscal problem will remain in the months, if not years, to come, especially in smaller cities and counties with already poor public finance and net population outflows,” he said.

“This means authorities there will do whatever they can to tighten their belts and tap into unconventional revenue sources like fines.”

Police in many cities have doubled down on issuing traffic tickets, and across the country, more check points have been set up to fine drivers and passengers for not fastening their seat belts and other related violations.

According to a report from the China Youth Daily newspaper, in Chengwu county in Heze city in Shandong’s southwest, truck drivers can pay for a “monthly pass” of 1,000 or 2,000 yuan to be free from further fines in the event of any future traffic violations.

In 2021, Chengwu county collected 1.3 billion yuan in fiscal revenue, compared to an expenditure of 4.3 billion yuan.

If the desperate measures continue to increase, potential consequences include deteriorating levels of public services, sporadic protests, and eventually, defaults on local government debt, Xu said.

“From a macroeconomic perspective, since the public sector as a whole is a large employer in China, the ongoing fiscal strain could erode the income of employees in the sector, which will translate into even lower consumer spending,” Xu added.

“A short-term imperative would be to stem the spread of the ongoing crisis. To that end, China will need to normalise its revenue stream, reboot its property market and have the central government to bail out some of the distressed localities.

“The long-term theme will be fiscal consolidation. For example, governments and public facilities in smaller administrative units are likely to be merged to save costs. Government mandates could be gradually narrowed to focus on basic public services and pivot away from generous investment projects.”

Under financial stress, some local governments have already suspended public services, including buses, and delayed salary payments to civil servants.

In Hequ county in Shanxi province, two thirds of public servants have been effectively laid off, bursting the bubbles of the so-called iron rice bowl from an occupation which traditionally had guaranteed job security.

Dancheng, a county with a population of 1.37 million in central Henan province, suspended bus services last month, while multiple bus lines in Boluo county in Guangdong province have also been slashed or suspended due to financial stress, according to a Caixin report.

“Down the road, the local government potentially may sell more assets to deal with this kind of a fiscal pressure,” said Zhang Zhiwei, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

“Local governments have state-owned enterprises, they have assets, they also have cash flow generating business, the highway, for instance. Those assets potentially can be sold to help deal with the fiscal pressure.

“But ultimately the solution has to come from the recovery of the local economy, otherwise the current economic and fiscal challenge can only be resolved by helping the economy to rebound to its potential.

“So there has to be some change of the zero-Covid policy, hopefully after the leadership reshuffle later this year and beginning of next year so the zero-Covid policy eventually could be relaxed, that will help the economy to rebound.”

The burden of additional spending to contain the coronavirus could also risk the long term sustainability of local government fiscal conditions, squeezing the rest of the expenditure and the welfare of the economy, Zhang added.

He added that while it still needs more data to analyse, it is worth paying attention to the crowding out effect coronavirus-related expenses have on pension and healthcare in the long term.

A Ministry of Finance report published last month on the implementation of fiscal policies in the first half of the year urged governments to tighten their belts by paying close attention to their budget implementation, prioritising essential expenses and ensuring that key expenditures, including teachers’ salaries and pensions, are paid on time.

As for the fines handed out by the local authorities, a local media report from late last month said that the potato vendor hit with a 300,000 yuan penalty in Daqing in the northern province of Heilongjiang was planning to appeal against the penalty.

The report added that he paid 60,000 yuan a year to rent the storefront, and that he had sold more than 2,000kg of potatoes at 4 yuan per kilogram.
 
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What's matter with their Zero Covid Policy? Shouldn't the Zero Covid Policy stopped after their people get vaccination? Even in Indonesia, we have already get 3 times vaccines. With China money, they should have at least vaccine their whole citizens. Or they didn't even give their people free vaccine for these 2 whole years?
 
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What's matter with their Zero Covid Policy? Shouldn't the Zero Covid Policy stopped after their people get vaccination? Even in Indonesia, we have already get 3 times vaccines. With China money, they should have at least vaccine their whole citizens. Or they didn't even give their people free vaccine for these 2 whole years?

My mother already gets the 4 times :smitten:
 
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China can go harder on stimulus now that the housing bubble has popped.
 
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China can go harder on stimulus now that the housing bubble has popped.

Providing economic stimulus while continuing Covid lockdowns is like putting plaster on a severely injured man while continue stabbing his vital organs.
 
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Providing economic stimulus while continuing Covid lockdowns is like putting plaster on a severely injured man while continue stabbing his vital organs.
agreed. covid lockdowns is no long viable after omega variant. China needs to prepare its population for the hundreds of thousands that will die once China opens tho.
 
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Providing economic stimulus while continuing Covid lockdowns is like putting plaster on a severely injured man while continue stabbing his vital organs.
Now we are just cutting interest rates and taxes. If we need to continue to increase stimulus, we can also increase the issuance of currency. Because we can export inflation to the world through commodity exports.
 
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Now we are just cutting interest rates and taxes. If we need to continue to increase stimulus, we can also increase the issuance of currency. Because we can export inflation to the world through commodity exports.

What happen to service sector like restaurant, barbershop, etc ?

My friend needs to stop his restaurant operation after one year long Covid 19 restriction.

My favorite barbershop that is near my place and I have been with that barbershop since quite long is closed down about 5 months after first Covid 19 restriction is announced.

But yep, many small business still in operation since Indonesia never impose strict Covid 19 restriction, restaurant for example can rely on online shop using Gojek and Grab application to survive during Covid 19 restriction
 
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Many business dont own their office space or business space, those who have the assets will keep asking their rent money, they dont care whether the business operation is in dire situation due to Covid 19 restriction
 
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Now we are just cutting interest rates and taxes. If we need to continue to increase stimulus, we can also increase the issuance of currency. Because we can export inflation to the world through commodity exports.
i'm sure @Mista will respond once he's finished rolling on the floor laughing :lol:
 
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i'm sure @Mista will respond once he's finished rolling on the floor laughing :lol:

Not gonna spend time on such ridiculous notion. In other threads he says a depreciating RMB is good for exports, and in this thread he says the world will pick up the tab for more expensive Chinese exports. Heads or tails, either way he will exercise mental gymnastics and China will always come out winning. Copium max lol. IIRC like Erdogan he also believes increasing interest rate will add to inflation. :lol:
 
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Not gonna spend time on such ridiculous notion. In other threads he says a depreciating RMB is good for exports, and in this thread he says the world will pick up the tab for more expensive Chinese exports. Heads or tails, either way he will exercise mental gymnastics and China will always come out winning. Copium max lol. IIRC like Erdogan he also believes increasing interest rate will add to inflation. :lol:
well 5% of US household income is spent on imports from China. So his brilliant scheme of exporting inflation will only work on essential goods that is sole sourced from China. Besides how does one print more RMB and still preserve its strength vis-à-vis major international trading currencies? But yeah, thank god for the ha ha reaction button in response to copium max, I guess.
 
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