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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
Deflation accelerates further opening of Chinese economy
By James Conachy
20 September 1999
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A major factor in the negotiations being held last week on
Chinese membership of the World Trade Organisation is the continuing
deterioration of the country's economy. The August issue of the
China Financial & Economic Times, published by the
Ministry of Finance, was the first official organ to state that
China is in recession. Referring to it as slight,
the journal cites declines in energy consumption, falls in the
volume of goods transported and the existence of 15 million urban
unemployednearly triple the official figure of 5.7 million.
Other indices point to a more serious state of affairs. China
is the victim of the same global deflationary pressures, reflected
in over-capacity and unsold stock, which produced the Asian economic
meltdown of 1997-98. Much of China's output, which doubled in
the 1990s, is now surplus to the requirements of a contracted
world market.
Over-capacity affects 80 percent of industrial, consumer and
agricultural commodities. Goods churned out on the expectation
of export opportunities and expanding domestic demand have not
been sold. In the case of cotton, textile mills in some provinces
are holding 18 months of supply and do not need this year's harvest.
Over-capacity has seen consumer price indexes fall for 22 consecutive
months and unemployment soar as firms scale back production.
This year the Chinese economy is expected to record its first
decline in exports since 1983. Low demand and increased competition
from Asia, a 50 percent drop in exports to Russia, and a fall
in European orders have caused exports to fall 2.8 percent in
the first seven months of 1999. The only major export market still
holding up is the United States.
The frenzied construction of new factories, offices, hotels,
roads, power plants and real estate along the entire Chinese east
coastall predicated on a continuation of the growth that
saw China's exports increase from US$62 billion in 1990 to US$183
billion in 1998has stopped. The real estate market is now
so over-supplied that Shanghai, Beijing and Shenzhen have enough
office space to meet present levels of demand for the next five
years.
With imports soaring by 16.6 percent, China's US$30.9 billion
trade surplus in 1998 is expected to drop to less than US$20 billion
this year. Any rupture in consumer demand in the US will send
China toward a balance of trade deficit.
The decline in exports has impacted on foreign direct investment.
For the first seven months of 1999, investment fell 10 percent
to US$21.49 billion. Further falls are anticipated from an expected
downturn of the US economy.
A recent survey in Shanghai found that half of the foreign-invested
enterprises, particularly smaller firms, were losing money. Throughout
China, 40 percent of 150,000 foreign companies are making losses.
In July this year the government allowed former employees of foreign
and privately owned companies to claim unemployment benefits,
an indication of widespread layoffs.
Doubts about China's economic future have triggered capital
flight. A World Bank report released last month estimates that
capital outflows in 1998 soared to $US71 billion, up from $US44
billion in 1997. The report warns that capital flight may reach
$US68 billion in 1999 and similar levels the following year, causing
large balance of payments deficits.
Devaluation and banking system
China is not as vulnerable to capital flight as other Asian
economies were in 1997-98. It currently holds US$150 billion in
foreign currency reservesthe second highest amount in the
world after Japanand still receives the largest flow of
foreign direct investment of any developing country. An ongoing
decline in these reserves, however, will create enormous pressure
for a devaluation of the yuan, China's currency.
It has been estimated that the yuan would have to be devalued
by 25 to 30 percent in order to restore export growth rates to
pre-1998 levels. The Chinese government has been reluctant to
pursue such a course of action.
Much of China's exports are in the processing trade, where
raw materials, components or unfinished goods are imported into
the country for final assembly and re-export. This activity amounted
to US$104.5 billion, or 56.9 percent of China's total exports
in 1998. Imports to supply the processing trade made up 48.9 percent
of the national total or US$68.6 billion. It is debatable whether
a devaluation, which would raise import costs, would assist or
hurt such trade.
Of greater concern, however, is the impact devaluation would
have on China's most fundamental economic malaisethe level
of bad debt within the financial sector, especially the dominant
state banks.
Moody's credit rating agency estimates that China's state banks
have over US$180 billion in non-performing loans, or 20 percent
of total lending. Other estimates place the figure as high as
30 percent. The primary source of the non-performing loans is
the state-owned enterprises.
By the mid-1980s, most of China's state-owned enterprises,
by international standards, were suffering from technological
backwardness and low productivity of labour. They consumed ever
growing and unsustainable proportions of national investment.
Throughout the 1990s, the Chinese government, using a combination
of state banking funds and various economic regulations, has attempted
to restructure and modernise the state-owned enterprises into
profitable corporations. While the entry of foreign capital into
China has been actively sought and facilitated, the state-owned
enterprises have been protected from international competition.
Production by foreign companies is predominantly for export with
strict controls on domestic sales. Privately-owned Chinese companies
were not granted export licenses until 1999, in order to protect
export opportunities for state firms.
The banks have extended billions of dollars in loans to state-owned
enterprises to finance mergers, factory re-tooling, and the wage
payments to millions of workers sent home by redundant industries
but unable to find alternative employment. Up to 30 million jobs
have been eliminated and thousands of firms amalgamated into larger
conglomerates or bankrupted. Last year alone, six million jobs
were lost and 40,000 enterprises merged or bankrupted. Over seven
million jobs will be cut this year.
Despite the years of radical restructuring, a third of China's
state-owned enterprises are still unprofitable and the government
target of eliminating losses by next year will not be met. In
order to continue financing this restructuring, China's banks
have been forced to borrow internationally in foreign currency-denominated
loans but receive virtually all revenue in yuan. The danger of
a devaluation, which would increase servicing costs on foreign
denominated loans, is that some Chinese banks would be unable
to meet debt obligations.
Even if the yuan is not devalued, the potential for a financial
crisis is acute. Interest rates have been cut in the last three
years from 9 percent to 2.25 percent to stimulate consumer spending.
This has squeezed bank margins, already under pressure from the
increasing number of state enterprises unable to maintain loan
repayments. This month the Hong Kong arm of the Bank of China
announced a 46 percent fall in profit, with mainland non-performing
loans increasing from 1.96 percent to 8.26 percent of its total
lending.
The ability of the state banking system to finance economic
restructuring has reached its limit. A credit crunch is now developing
as banks become more reluctant to extend loans, except to the
safest of customersthe largest state companies backed by
the government. Investment by China's new class of entrepreneurs
and capitalists has fallen, as have the number of employees in
China's 30 million private businesses. News articles are appearing
complaining about the difficulty that this sector of the economy
has obtaining credit.
The central government is attempting to stave off economic
depression by means of unprecedented levels of budget deficit
spending and last year launched a US$24.3 billion infrastructure-spending
program. But fixed asset investment by the state, which was almost
entirely responsible for China's 7.8 percent economic growth percent
last year, has now exhausted its impact. After pushing economic
growth to 9 percent for the last quarter of 1998, growth fell
back to 8.3 percent in the first quarter and 7.1 percent for April-June
1999. Fixed asset investment figures for July plummeted to 3.1
percent, compared to 11.3 percent for the first half of the year.
Another $US7 billion government infrastructure program has
been announced but such policy measures are unsustainable. Government
debt is rising rapidly and interest payments on loans make up
a growing proportion of the national budget.
An attempt to deal with the weight of bad debt held by the
banks is being made through the proposed transfer of up to US$100
billion in debts from the banks to four asset management companies,
in return for equity shares in the indebted companies. The plan
is that the asset management companies will then sell the equitya
de-facto form of privatisation.
The question that looms over China's policy makers is where
to obtain the capital needed to buy this equity, or required by
profitable Chinese firms for expansion. Increasingly, the only
possible sources are international, be they transnational companies,
banks or stock markets. China is being driven toward opening its
financial system to international penetration, its state-owned
enterprises to foreign ownership, and its domestic market to foreign
competition. This is at the heart of China's striving for WTO
membership.
See Also:
Beijing accelerates market
reforms as economic growth and investment slows
[20 May 1999]
Business pressure prompts
Clinton to restart US-China trade talks
[17 April 1999]
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