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The Truth About China’s Economy That Trump Won’t Get: There Is No Surplus

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The Truth About China’s Economy That Trump Won’t Get: There Is No Surplus
  • A major economic shift has taken place which has all but eliminated the structural surplus in China’s current account
  • And it’s good news for the global economy, even if Trump – and most other observers – are struggling to see it
When Donald Trump complains about China’s trade practices, he inevitably points at China’s monster trade surplus with the United States as evidence the Chinese are cheating.

At first glance, it looks as if the US president might have a point. According to US Census Bureau data, over the 12 months to October China ran a US$410 billion merchandise trade surplus with the US – the biggest such imbalance on record.

But to focus on China’s bilateral trade surplus with the US is misleading. Viewed in broader terms, China’s trade imbalance shrinks. Over the same period its overall goods trade surplus with the world was US$360 billion.

And viewed in the broadest terms of all, it disappears altogether. Over the first nine months of last year, China actually ran a current account deficit.

In effect this means China was running an overdraft with the rest of the world.

This deficit may not last; there are good cyclical reasons to think China’s current account is likely to swing back into a small surplus this year.

Nevertheless, the shift which has seen China’s current account balance shrink from a surplus equal to 10 per cent of its gross domestic product 10 years ago to near zero today is a major structural change which will have far-reaching implications for the global economy.

Most observers, including Trump, have yet to get their heads around this change. The majority still think of China as a surplus country.

But generally when people talk about China’s trade balance, they are only thinking of its trade in physical stuff. China’s goods trade with the rest of the world is indeed in surplus. But over the last 10 years its trade balance in services has swung from zero to a deficit of around US$300 billion.


It’s not hard to find the explanation. China hasn’t taken to importing banking or insurance services from its trading partners. Nor are Chinese companies paying Google vastly more for advertising services.

What has changed is that more and more Chinese tourists are travelling abroad – more than 130 million of them last year. And they are spending freely when they do, which counts in China’s balance of payments as an import of services.

As a result, China’s net imports of services have climbed to a level where they almost offset its net exports of goods. Add in the investment income repatriated by foreign investors in China, which more than offsets inflows from Chinese investments abroad, and China’s overall current account balance with the rest of the world has shrunk almost to zero.

This doesn’t mean that the pendulum is set to swing further, carrying China into a large external deficit. The most rapid phase of China’s outbound tourism growth is over, and over the last couple of years the increase in departures has slowed. This suggests the structural shift in China’s external balance is on pause.

Meanwhile, cyclical forces are likely to move China’s current account back into a small surplus this year. In 2018, the value of China’s net goods exports contracted because the price of key imports went up. The price of oil averaged US$72 a barrel last year, up from US$55 in 2017. At the same time, benchmark prices for semiconductors almost doubled. Together these increases knocked more than US$100 billion off China’s trade surplus in goods.

With China and other major economies set to slow this year, weaker demand is likely to lead to lower prices for both oil and semiconductors, pushing China’s current account balance back into a small surplus.

Even so, the fact remains that over this decade, a major economic shift has taken place which has all but eliminated the large structural surplus in China’s current account.

It is hard to overstate the importance of this shift, both for China and for the global economy.

A large current account surplus is a sign that an economy is producing far more than it consumes domestically. By the same token, if an economy is consuming much less than it produces, it is saving far more of its income than it needs to finance its domestic investments.

In other words, China’s large current account surplus in the 2000s was the flip-side of the Chinese savings glut that many economists blame for causing the global financial crisis.

There are two ways to eliminate such a glut. An economy can ramp up its investment. Or it can save less of its income, which necessarily means consuming more. The recent decline in China’s investment rate indicates that it is not the former. So it must be the latter: China is saving less and consuming more.

In short, China’s economy is finally seeing the long-awaited rebalancing that former premier Wen Jiabao identified as essential to its long term health as long ago as 2007.

That’s good for China. It means less chance of over-investment, and greater sustainability in the long run.

And it’s good for the rest of the world.
Economists frequently say that China has been the greatest contributor to global economic growth over recent years. Strictly speaking that’s true, but it is also misleading.

China’s large surplus in net exports added to China’s growth. But it meant that the rest of the world ran a net export deficit with China, which subtracted from economic growth outside China.

Sure, China’s rise boosted individual economies that ran surpluses with China; Australia is a prime example. But for the rest of the world as a whole, the tyranny of arithmetic meant that China’s structural current account surplus detracted from economic growth.

Now that surplus is largely eliminated, China is no longer a drag on growth in the rest of the world as a whole. That’s clearly positive. Just don’t expect Donald Trump to see it that way.

https://www.scmp.com/week-asia/opin...hinas-economy-trump-wont-get-there-no-surplus
 
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China is going to need more foreign money as its trade surplus dries up, Morgan Stanley says

China will likely become more reliant on foreign capital as the country looks set to enter into years of shortfall in its current account, Morgan Stanley predicted in a report.

"The economy's current account is in long-term decline and the future growth of the economy will be increasingly dependent on foreign capital," said the investment bank in a report on Tuesday.

The last time China had a current account deficit was in 1993. A country may need to operate on borrowed means when it runs into a deficit as the total value of goods, services and investments it imports exceeds the total value it exports.


Unlike 1993, however, the investment bank predicts that the shift toward a shortfall might be "sustained," setting the world's second biggest economy on a path to becoming more reliant on foreign capital from 2020 onward.

China's current account surplus has slipped from 10.3 percent of its GDP in the third quarter of 2017, to just 0.4 percent in the third quarter of 2018. This year, the current account deficit could be 0.3 percent of its GDP, and widen to 0.6 percent in 2020, the investment bank predicted.

That pales in comparison to its golden days more than a decade ago, when China had a huge current account surplus of $420 billion, or 9.9 percent of its GDP in 2007.

Demographic shift

The report blamed the shrinking current account on China's aging population, and plateauing market share in goods exports, among other factors.

"We expect China to shift to an annual current account deficit from 2019 onwards due to a slipping national saving rate amid an aging population," said the bank.

morgan%20stanley%20chart%201.1550039502824.JPG


A deficit means that a country is spending more than it is getting in income. And if the country's national savings rate is declining, then it would have to attract more foreign capital to fund its needs.

Besides a shrinking share in exports, there has also been rising domestic demand for imported goods and outbound tourism, which has exacerbated the narrowing surplus, according to the report.

morgan%20stanley%20chart%202.1550039591074.JPG


In addition to that, China is experiencing a slowdown. Official government figures said the country's economy slowed last year to 6.6 percent — the lowest expansion rate in 28 years.


With the gloomy outlook, Morgan Stanley estimated that China will require at least $210 billion of net foreign capital inflows per year from 2019 to 2030 in order to finance the shortfall. That funding gap would initially be between $50 billion and $90 billion a year from 2019 to 2020, but would widen gradually to $200 billion in 2020, the bank estimated.

"This means that China will need to improve its business environment further and attract (foreign direct investment) inflows, accelerate opening up of the domestic equity and bond markets, and promote RMB's status as an international reserve currency," it said, referring to another name for the Chinese yuan.

Investor opportunities

But investors can seize some opportunities amid those developments.

Morgan Stanley is overweight on China stocks.

"Inflows into China's equity markets will likely rise thanks to growth in the A-share market cap over the long run … A stabilisation in China growth this year would also help to encourage inflows, and we see more gains," the report said.

It also recommended that investors buy the stock of Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX), the city's stock exchange operator. The bank explained that rising stock and bond portfolio flows will lead to rising revenues for the operator, helping its stock do well over the next two to three years.

https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/13/china-economy-morgan-stanley-predicts-chinas-account-deficit-in-2019.html
 
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China's 2018 current account stays in reasonable surplus range
Source: Xinhua| 2019-02-15 18:52:51
BEIJING, Feb. 15 (Xinhua) -- China's current account stayed in a reasonable surplus range in 2018, official data showed Friday.
The country's current account registered a surplus of 49.1 billion U.S. dollars last year thanks to robust surplus growth in the last quarter, according to the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE).
http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2019-02/15/c_137824897.htm

Compared to the previous year:

China's current account surplus remains reasonable in 2017
Source: Xinhua| 2018-03-30 00:09:38|
BEIJING, March 29 (Xinhua) -- China's current account surplus remained within a reasonable range last year, the country's foreign exchange regulator said Thursday.
The current account surplus stood at 164.9 billion U.S. dollars in 2017, accounting for 1.3 percent of GDP, according to the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE).
http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2018-03/30/c_137075325.htm
 
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That's probably why China is cutting back on wind, solar, electric cars. These things are ruining China economy.
 
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Yeah Trump just wants the current account to be more balanced vis-a-vis China (and US)....whatever the overall total situation China has with the world at large is not Trump's concern (i.e china will have to re-orient all that to better satisfy US demands).

Making current account with US more balanced will also make the capital account more balanced (remember current + capital summation = 0 in theory). Basically it will give less avenue for US govt to run debt based govt spending (which is propped up by china's current account surplus, and the capital account deficit with US through China's forex stockpile that it cannot use)....which is another good thing in long run for US.
 
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Yeah Trump just wants the current account to be more balanced vis-a-vis China (and US)....whatever the overall total situation China has with the world at large is not Trump's concern (i.e china will have to re-orient all that to better satisfy US demands).

Making current account with US more balanced will also make the capital account more balanced (remember current + capital summation = 0 in theory). Basically it will give less avenue for US govt to run debt based govt spending (which is propped up by china's current account surplus, and the capital account deficit with US through China's forex stockpile that it cannot use)....which is another good thing in long run for US.

Actually a large part of China's trade surplus with the US is accrued to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. China imports intermediate products (like semiconductors) from these countries, assembles, and exports to the US. And a huge number of assembly factories are from these countries, thus primary income in the current account accrue to them as well.

China’s spending on foreign oil rose 39% year-on-year to $162 billion in 2017, while semiconductor imports rose 13.9% to $259 billion.

http://knowledge.ckgsb.edu.cn/2018/...national-trade/china-current-account-deficit/
 
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Actually a large part of China's trade surplus with the US is accrued to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. China imports intermediate products (like semiconductors) from these countries, assembles, and exports to the US. And a huge number of assembly factories are from these countries, thus primary income in the current account accrue to them as well.

That's correct. China's assembly business for iPhones was something in a single digit percentage while the rest of the costs accrued to other countries.

One of the reasons why countries like Korea and Japan have a surplus in trade with China, the electronics industry.
 
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If there is no surplus then how their forex keep going up and up and up, are they lying about it
 
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Actually a large part of China's trade surplus with the US is accrued to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. China imports intermediate products (like semiconductors) from these countries, assembles, and exports to the US. And a huge number of assembly factories are from these countries, thus primary income in the current account accrue to them as well.



http://knowledge.ckgsb.edu.cn/2018/...national-trade/china-current-account-deficit/

Yes I am talking about from US perspective (they aren't too concerned about what the actual value addition that takes place in China is in a good, just the final sourcing is from there).

US is seeking redressal of the stacked current account...it will mostly come about likely from China importing more from the US....that China currently imports from others (various commodities etc).

Tightening America's current account deficit overall will help reduce its capital account surplus (which is mostly loaned back to them for govt debt which is not sustainable long term).

If there is no surplus then how their forex keep going up and up and up, are they lying about it

Its pretty stable now, and the peak was around 2014:

https://tradingeconomics.com/china/foreign-exchange-reserves
 
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If there is no surplus then how their forex keep going up and up and up, are they lying about it

Nope. There is still a current surplus, just that it's shrinking over the years.
 
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that may be because in last 5 years China had made huge investments

To a degree yes (i.e deploying capital account flow externally rather than having it divert to forex to subsidise employment and potential overcapacity etc). But the effect of shrinking current account surplus also plays its role....and I think a larger one overall if you look at the numbers.

Wen JiaBao is an interesting guy to look up regarding what he said (I think back in 2007) China would have to face in years to come....i.e the (surplus export driven) strategy has to evolve/transition to another phase. So we are seeing that happen now basically.
 
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It shrinks because China is making investment all over the world, these investment will bear fruits in the future



that may be because in last 5 years China had made huge investments

If 130 million tourists travel abroad this year and spend just $2,000 per head on average, then the total capital outflow from China is $260B for the year.

It's offset by arrivals, but you can imagine how quickly this can grow over the years, both numbers and average expenditure.
 
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