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Will the 'China Miracle' Continue?

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Will the 'China Miracle' Continue? -- Beijing Review

Yifu Lin, Professor of Economics at Peking University


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FULL STEAM AHEAD: An inter-city high-speed railway line in east China's Shandong Province is tested on October 5. The 300-km railway connects three major cities of the province—Qingdao, Yantai and Weihai (SUN WENTAN)

China's economic growth rate has been declining since 2010, falling to a six-year low of 7.3 percent in the third quarter of 2014. This has been the longest growth slowdown since the country adopted the reform and opening-up policy in 1978. In an article recently published on the Reference News, Yifu Lin, a professor of economics at Peking University and former chief economist and senior vice president of the World Bank, thinks that the growth slowdown is mainly caused by external factors. He believes China can still achieve a relatively fast growth of 7 percent or more by fully tapping into its advantages as a latecomer. Edited excerpts of the article follow:

My coauthored book--The China Miracle: Development Strategy and Economic Reform--published 20 years ago forecast that China may surpass the United States to become the world's largest economy in 2015 in terms of purchasing power parity (PPP), if it continues to put forward reforms. At that time, most scholars didn't believe such a prediction. Yet, 20 years later, the forecast has been proven correct, as indicated in the data from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

However, China's huge population means its per-capita GDP remains low compared with the United States. The Chinese population is four times that of the United States. Even if China's GDP surpasses U.S. GDP, the former's per-capita GDP measured by PPP is only one fourth of the latter's. Moreover, measured by exchange rate, China's per-capita GDP is only one eighth that of the United States. Therefore, China still needs to maintain relatively fast growth for years in order to catch up with developed countries in terms of per-capita GDP.

Potential remains

When I finished my tenure with the World Bank in 2012, I predicted that the Chinese economy still had the potential to expand at an average annual rate of 8 percent for 20 years starting from 2008. This prediction was again met with many questions and doubts from domestic scholars. They argued that since the reform and opening up began in the late 1970s, China had already maintained average annual growth of 9.8 percent for 35 years, which has never happened in history. After 35 years of high-speed growth, how could it be possible that China still has the potential to maintain such momentum?

In fact, China's economic growth has been declining since the beginning of 2010, falling to 7.3 percent in the third quarter of 2014. Moreover, the downward pressure remains great. Such a trend appears initially to confirm their views.

What caused the GDP growth to continuously decline since the first quarter of 2010? Does it mean the country's growth potential has slid below 8 percent? Or, is it caused by the so-called "intrinsic systematic problems" claimed by some doomsayers?

I believe the recent economic growth slowdown has been mainly attributed to external factors. Similar slowdowns were seen in other emerging economies, including India and Brazil, as well as high-income East Asian nations like Singapore and South Korea (see graph). Therefore, it can only be international cyclical factors that weighed on these countries' economies. Moreover, China performed much better in comparison with those countries.

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Latecomer advantage

Putting external shocks aside, how much growth potential does China's economy still have? We need to take a closer look at the nature of economic growth and the decisive factors behind rapid growth.

The nature of economic growth is the continuous growth of per-capita GDP, which is based on rising levels of labor productivity. Meanwhile, continued technological innovation and industrial upgrading are the decisive factors behind rapid growth of the modern economy. Yet, unlike developed countries that had to rely on their own research and development starting with the industrial revolution in the 18th century, developing countries are able to imitate, introduce and integrate existing technologies at lower costs with lower risks. This is the "latecomer advantage."

Theoretically speaking, if a developing country can make use of this advantage to achieve technological innovation and industrial upgrading, its economic growth could be faster than that in developed countries. According to research by the Commission on Growth and Development led by Nobel laureate Michael Spence, after World War II, 13 economies utilized the latecomer advantage to achieve annual GDP growth of 7 percent or more for 25 years or longer, more than double the growth rates of developed countries.

The latecomer advantage was a major reason for China's fast growth, which became one of the above-mentioned 13 economies after 1979. Whether the country still has the potential for further rapid growth depends on how much of the latecomer advantage it can still harness.

Per-capita GDP, which represents a country's labor productivity and technological and industrial prowess, can be used to measure the extent of its latecomer advantage. The per-capita GDP gap between China and developed countries reflects a gap in technological and industrial development. According to data from the late British economist Angus Maddison, in 2008, China's per-capita GDP was about 21 percent that of the United States, which was roughly the gap between the United States and Japan in 1951, Singapore in 1967, and South Korea in 1977. Japan, Singapore and South Korea saw economic growth soar to 9.2 percent, 8.6 percent and 7.6 percent over the following 20 years by making full use of their latecomer advantages. In this sense, China should also have the potential for 8 percent annual growth from 2008 to 2028.

From theory to reality

Of course, to turn growth potential into actual growth, China needs to continuously carry out technological innovation and industrial upgrading to make full use of its latecomer advantage.

To this end, an effective market is needed, so that the right signal about prices can be sent to businesses in order for them to make decisions on which technologies and industries to invest in. Meanwhile, the government should play its due role by tackling those inevitable market failures during technological innovation and industrial upgrading, so as to guide the country's industrial upgrading in a timely fashion. The government should refrain from "too much intervention" and it should also avoid "too little intervention."

To build an effective market, the double-track price system should be changed to a market-based price system. In this way, price can be a signal to reflect relative scarcity of different production factors in China and problems left behind by the double-track price system--such as income disparity, rent seeking and corruption--can be completely rooted out. At the same time, an active government that can make the best use of the situation will not only enable the Chinese economy to fully tap the country's latecomer advantage, but also give the government more energy to deal with other internal and external challenges, such as the waning demographic dividend domestically and a fragile recovery of the global economy.

China has become an upper middle-income country whose products are competitive in both domestic and overseas markets, such as home appliances, automobiles, ships and large equipment. Government subsidies have become a dispensable supplement to businesses compared with a necessity in the beginning of the reform and opening up. Therefore, the market should play a decisive role in allocating resources and the government should play a better role, just as decided at the Third Plenary Session of the 18th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China. China can grant subsidies to the few necessary industries from fiscal revenue, a common practice among developed countries.

If an effective market and an active government can be built in China amid efforts to comprehensively bolster reforms, China can make full use of its latecomer advantage.

In that case, even if developed countries have yet to recover from the global financial crisis in 2008 and breakneck expansion in exports can't be sustained in China, China is likely to achieve 7 percent or faster growth, backed by boosting domestic consumption and investing in areas with high social and economic benefits, such as industrial upgrading, improvement of infrastructure, environmental protection and urbanization. If so, the per-capita GDP and per-capita rural income can double by 2020 from the 2010 level.

Coupled with the appreciation of its currency, the yuan, China is highly likely to join the ranks of high-income nations around 2020, which would make it the third one to climb from low-income to middle-income and finally to a high-income economic entity after World War II.

Email us at: yushujun@bjreview.com
 
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CHINA TODAY

By HU JIANGYUN

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, China’s economic growth rates in the first and second quarters of 2014 were 7.4 percent and 7.5 percent respectively, lower than those of last year’s third and fourth quarters, which were 7.8 percent and 7.7 percent. Observers have started to question this economic trend: Is China headed for a recession?

Judging by the growth rate, China’s economy does seem to be slowing down. But in fact, there is significant sustaining potential and momentum behind the country’s economic growth, and factors like structural adjustment and healthy market competition support a stable growth model.

The first positive sign is the effect of China’s structural adjustment. Since the outbreak of the global financial crisis, China has adjusted its economic structure to support growth. Particularly broad strides have been made in the tertiary industry structure, where further optimization means that the added value of this sector has gradually increased its proportion of GDP, even exceeding that of secondary industry. During the first half of 2014, the tertiary industry’s added value accounted for 46.6 percent of GDP, a year-on-year growth of 1.3 percent, and 0.6 percent higher than that of the secondary industry. The burgeoning service sector’s growth rate has surpassed that of primary and secondary industries. From January to June this year, the tertiary industry registered a growth of eight percent.

Inside China’s tertiary sector, productive service industries, such as e-commerce, develop rapidly, much quicker than traditional ones. Based on a report from the China E-business Research Center, from 2010 to 2013 the yearly turnover of China’s e-commerce market was RMB 4.5 trillion, 6 trillion, 7.85 trillion and 10.2 trillion respectively, representing year-on-year growth rates of 22 percent, 33 percent, 30.8 percent and 29.9 percent. As of December 2013, 2.35 million people were employed in e-commerce service enterprises, and the industry also indirectly created 16.8 million jobs. China’s small and medium-sized enterprises that use third-party e-commerce platforms number 19 million.

By readjusting its industrial structure, China has eliminated excess production capacity and outdated techniques and equipment, creating huge development space for energy conservation and environmental protection industries. From 2009 to 2012, the annual total output value of China’s energy conservation and environmental protection industries was RMB 0.98 trillion, 1.16 trillion, 1.38 trillion and 1.65 trillion respectively, a year-on-year growth of 16.1 percent, 17.8 percent, 19.1 percent and 19.4 percent. Furthermore, the employment figure has reached 25 million. The following graph shows the production value and growth of China’s energy-saving industry and environmental protection industry from 2008 to 2012.

The second support factor for economic growth is China’s healthy market competition, which has encouraged rapid expansion of private economy. In November 2013, the Third Plenary Session of the 18th CPC Central Committee explicitly elected to let the market mechanism play a decisive role. In this regard China has strengthened its financial budget and controlled public consumption. It has also transformed the government’s functions, substantially reduced administrative examination and approval, facilitated operation of market entities, and protected fair competition in the market. As a result, public investment and consumption has declined, while private investment and consumption has increased and substantially enhanced economic efficiency. In 2013, the nominal growth of private fixed asset investments was 23.1 percent, higher than that of national fixed asset investment, which was 19.6 percent. During the first half of this year, the nominal growth of private fixed asset investments was 20.1 percent, higher than that of national fixed asset investment, which was 17.3 percent. From January to June, the retail sales of consumer goods totaled RMB 12.4199 trillion, a year-on-year nominal growth of 12.1 percent. Online retail sales accounted for RMB 1.1375 trillion of that, a year-on-year increase of 48.3 percent. In addition, fierce competition also exists among different regions, helping to maintain stable economic development and full employment at a local level too.

Thirdly, China is a huge market and its huge potential in domestic demand is becoming manifest. With a population of over 1.3 billion, China has become a middle-income country. Preliminary estimates suggest that hundreds of millions of Chinese people earn within the middle-income range. Moreover, China’s huge domestic market – and its demand – is its strongest safety net, cushioning the impact of the global financial crisis. In recent years, along with the increase in income per capita, Chinese people’s lifestyle has changed gradually, from a save-more-consume-less attitude to an “enjoy life” mantra; the fever of domestic tourism and investment, as well as private overseas investment and cross-border consumption bolster China’s economic growth.

Finally, it is recognized that global economic recovery and China’s development influence each other. On one hand, sustainable economic development in China will provide impetus for world economic recovery and growth; on the other, in the context of economic globalization, China has had to form an inseparable bond with the world, thus, sharing weal and woe. From this year, the gradual economic recovery of the eurozone, further improvement of the U.S. economy, and stable economic development of emerging economies will continue to be conducive to enhanced international trade and cross-border investment, in favor of China’s economic growth.

On the whole, there are a number of favorable factors supporting stable economic growth in China. Of course, there are also risk factors in economic operation demanding our attention, including those in the virtual economy such as China’s real estate finance sector. Effectively guarding against them requires governmental macroeconomic regulation and control.



HU JIANGYUN is a researcher at the Development Research Center of the State Council.
 
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Per-capita GDP, which represents a country's labor productivity and technological and industrial prowess, can be used to measure the extent of its latecomer advantage. The per-capita GDP gap between China and developed countries reflects a gap in technological and industrial development. According to data from the late British economist Angus Maddison, in 2008, China's per-capita GDP was about 21 percent that of the United States, which was roughly the gap between the United States and Japan in 1951, Singapore in 1967, and South Korea in 1977. Japan, Singapore and South Korea saw economic growth soar to 9.2 percent, 8.6 percent and 7.6 percent over the following 20 years by making full use of their latecomer advantages. In this sense, China should also have the potential for 8 percent annual growth from 2008 to 2028.

That's a very simplistic (and probably too optimistic) way of looking at the future. My thoughts on this:

1. The writer is forgetting that China already had its long spell of bullish run just like Japan, Singapore and South Korea. Even after that today China's per capita GDP is still at 21% of USA, BECAUSE the USA economy itself has grown tremendously after WW2. The USA of today is not the same as the USA of 1951, the gap of 79% per capita between USA and Japan, Singapore, South Korea were before they had their economic bull run, but in case of China this gap exist after 35 years of economic bull run by China. If you take USA as the goalpost, then the goalpost has shifted many miles during this period, so the logic presented by the writer may not work further.

2. There is a difference between Japan, Singapore, South Korea and China, the difference is in the size of the population. Though large population has its own advantage, but it is far more difficult to ensure a wholesome growth in terms of per capita for such a large population. Japan, Singapore and South Korea had the advantage of being smaller and nimble, China doesn't. China has achieved its rapid growth by utilizing its upper segments of the population, that's why China has very high income disparity today. Going forward, an inclusive growth for China's entire population will be a long and tedious process, not a rapid one.

3. Technology is far more mobile today compared to 1951 or 1967, largely because of the new policies of outsourcing. Japan, Singapore and South Korea enjoyed far less competition in their days of bull run, compared to today and 20 years in future. Today many countries are into the race of inviting FDI and absorbing the technology coming with such FDIs. So, the advantage that Japan, Singapore, South Korea and even China had some years ago won't going to continue in the future also.

Hence, I believe another 20 years of bull run is not left in Chinese economy, they had their run, now it is time to consolidate. :)
 
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That's a very simplistic (and probably too optimistic) way of looking at the future. My thoughts on this:

1. The writer is forgetting that China already had its long spell of bullish run just like Japan, Singapore and South Korea. Even after that today China's per capita GDP is still at 21% of USA, BECAUSE the USA economy itself has grown tremendously after WW2. The USA of today is not the same as the USA of 1951, the gap of 79% per capita between USA and Japan, Singapore, South Korea were before they had their economic bull run, but in case of China this gap exist after 35 years of economic bull run by China. If you take USA as the goalpost, then the goalpost has shifted many miles during this period, so the logic presented by the writer may not work further.

2. There is a difference between Japan, Singapore, South Korea and China, the difference is in the size of the population. Though large population has its own advantage, but it is far more difficult to ensure a wholesome growth in terms of per capita for such a large population. Japan, Singapore and South Korea had the advantage of being smaller and nimble, China doesn't. China has achieved its rapid growth by utilizing its upper segments of the population, that's why China has very high income disparity today. Going forward, an inclusive growth for China's entire population will be a long and tedious process, not a rapid one.

3. Technology is far more mobile today compared to 1951 or 1967, largely because of the new policies of outsourcing. Japan, Singapore and South Korea enjoyed far less competition in their days of bull run, compared to today and 20 years in future. Today many countries are into the race of inviting FDI and absorbing the technology coming with such FDIs. So, the advantage that Japan, Singapore, South Korea and even China had some years ago won't going to continue in the future also.

Hence, I believe another 20 years of bull run is not left in Chinese economy, they had their run, now it is time to consolidate. :)

1. China's case is unprecedented in history
2. Which makes China's success all the more laudable
3. Even today 60%+ of FDI to China comes from ethnic Chinese around the world. It's not all about money.
 
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1. China's case is unprecedented in history
2. Which makes China's success all the more laudable
3. Even today 60%+ of FDI to China comes from ethnic Chinese around the world. It's not all about money.

There is nothing unprecedented, and you are not on topic! :)
 
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Won't be over yet.

China is a continent in size. It has a lot of region that are still underdeveloped. Some infrastructures like roads, water, electricity can go a long way in making those regions more economically productive.

Also new projects like South-North water transport will allow China to grow more food in the north, spend less money to fight flood in yellow river and southern China.

New technology like high speed rials, information technology, and smartphones, will widen some bottlenecks in the Chinese economy.

China will probably grow at 7.4% in 2014, which is still huge! Funny thing is when India was growing that fast a decade ago, India was shining. Now China grows at that rate and China is an economic crisis.
 
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There is nothing unprecedented, and you are not on topic! :)

It is unprecedented though. :P

From the Economist:

China’s future growth: Even dragons tire | The Economist

Given this tendency, China’s long spell of breakneck growth—of more than 6% a year since 1977—already stands out.

It is, the authors reckon, the longest such spell “quite possibly in the history of mankind, but certainly in the data”.

China has had the longest spell of high growth in all of human history, that's according to all available data.

You can double-check the data if you disagree.
 
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It is unprecedented though. :P

From the Economist:

China’s future growth: Even dragons tire | The Economist



China has had the longest spell of high growth in all of human history, that's according to all available data.

You can double-check the data if you disagree.

Obviously, even something unprecedent in human history is something not impressive enough for certain sceptics who, at one tenth of China's success declared themselves a superpower.

China's long term advantages:

Growth potential in the Western regions
Large hydrocarbon potential
Educated and increasingly mobile workforce
Sustainable population growth
Renminbi internationalization
Successful start ups and growing entreprenourship
 
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Obviously, even something unprecedent in human history is something not impressive enough for certain sceptics who, at one tenth of China's success declared themselves a superpower.

China's long term advantages:

Growth potential in the Western regions
Large hydrocarbon potential
Educated and increasingly mobile workforce
Sustainable population growth
Renminbi internationalization
Successful start ups and growing entreprenourship

Jealousy will drive neighbour going emotional and non cool heads. China has not even reach developed level yet and how can it even starts decline? Fancy someone mention China is heading into something like Japan. Japan start declining when they reach first world level. While China has not even reach first world level yet which means plenty of room for growth. Looks like some just like to cherry pick and use example whenever according to his wish.
 
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Anybody who works in the field of policy and development knows how hard won this miracle has been for China. China's growth will continue well into the future, particularly because the institutional risks that China faces are now far less significant than they were a couple of decades ago. The miracle is precisely the fact that they've managed to achieve this, despite those institutional risks. Most importantly, they've stubbornly stuck to a China centric development policy despite what a lot of experts have had to say, something that has worked out very well for them.

As for India watching from the sidelines, I don't think it will. However, we have to develop a strategy that works for India- one that will be very different from China's. In higher education, for instance, China policy has almost functioned like a draft, with people being 'slotted' in where the state found it appropriate. While this has worked, to a great extent, for China, India's political structure will never permit it.

India keeping an eye on China is good, it focuses attention on just how far we've fallen behind and how urgently we need to change things. Over the last few months, at the very least, this sense of urgency seem to be showing in the day-to-day functioning of the government.
 
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It is unprecedented though. :P

From the Economist:

China’s future growth: Even dragons tire | The Economist



China has had the longest spell of high growth in all of human history, that's according to all available data.

You can double-check the data if you disagree.

Regardless of that,Era of Double digit growth is over for Chinese economy as living conditions improve the growth rate will slow down (for better) to a more sustainable rate but still in today's world 7% is very good
 
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As for India watching from the sidelines, I don't think it will. However, we have to develop a strategy that works for India- one that will be very different from China's. In higher education, for instance, China policy has almost functioned like a draft, with people being 'slotted' in where the state found it appropriate. While this has worked, to a great extent, for China, India's political structure will never permit it.

India keeping an eye on China is good, it focuses attention on just how far we've fallen behind and how urgently we need to change things. Over the last few months, at the very least, this sense of urgency seem to be showing in the day-to-day functioning of the government.

What year are you living in Indian? :dirol:
 
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