Trump is woefully incompetent.  

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Centroids
Sent: Tuesday, January 8, 2019 3:11 PM
To: Centroids Discussions <[email protected]>
Subject: [RC] China's Economic Slowdown Is Inevitable

 

Trump may bring China down, but could easily kill his re-election by forcing a 
recession. Win-win?

 

China's Economic Slowdown Is Inevitable
https://nationalinterest.org/feature/chinas-economic-slowdown-inevitable-39992
(via Instapaper <http://www.instapaper.com/> )

  _____  

Hit by a trade war and a slumping global economy, China is desperately 
attempting to avert a slowdown in the world’s second-biggest economy. Against 
all the odds, can Beijing pull it off? 

On December 21, China’s leadership signed off on an economic roadmap for 2019 
that features aggressive stimulus measures, including tax cuts and monetary 
easing. 

Yet Beijing’s top officials are not optimistic. The statement  
<https://asia.nikkei.com/Economy/Trade-War/China-to-cut-taxes-to-offset-trade-war-damage>
 released at the end of the three-day economic conference noted that “the 
external environment is complicated and severe, and the economy faces downward 
pressure.” 

The policymakers called for a “proactive fiscal policy” including tax cuts, 
exceeding the around 1.3 trillion yuan ($188 billion) already authorized for 
this year. They also urged a “prudent” monetary policy that is “neither too 
tight nor too loose,” suggesting a softer stance from the central bank. 

China’s efforts to rein in escalating debt levels may also be wound back 
slightly, with the policymakers committing to a “relatively substantial 
increase” in local government bonds. 

Notably, for the Trump administration, the statement asserted that China has 
“properly dealt with the Sino-U.S. economic and trade frictions.” 

“It is necessary to implement the consensus reached by the heads of state of 
China and the United States in Argentina to advance bilateral economic and 
trade negotiations,” it said in reference to the ninety-day moratorium on 
further tariff hikes agreed by U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese 
President Xi Jinping during their December 1 meeting. 

However, while the policymakers stated that “market access should be eased” and 
the intellectual property rights of foreign firms in China respected, they gave 
no indication Beijing would abandon its “Made in China 2025” initiative aimed 
at seizing global leadership in a number of key high-tech industries. 

“Losing Steam” 

But while Beijing looks to a brighter future, the short-term appears 
increasingly cloudy. 

Official gross domestic product (GDP) data showed the economy slowing for the 
second straight quarter in the September quarter, cooling to 6.5 percent from 
6.7 percent in the prior quarter, marking its slowest expansion since the 
global financial crisis. 

“China’s economy is losing steam,” Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economics 
research at HSBC Holdings, told  
<https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-10-19/china-economic-growth-slows-more-than-expected-in-third-quarter>
 Bloomberg News .

“While it’s easy to blame the trade tussle with the U.S. for this, the 
deceleration so far is mostly domestic driven, with infrastructure spending 
contracting and car sales coming off the boil.” 

The latest data shows Beijing’s full-year growth target of 6.5 percent could be 
a stretch. Industrial output, fixed investment, retail sales, trade and 
official manufacturing indices have all slipped, with consumer and producer 
prices also dropping. 

The only bright spot has been construction activity, long a favorite of 
policymakers given its responsiveness to increased credit. 

China’s stock market has tanked in 2018, losing around 22 percent over the past 
year, while the Chinese yuan has dropped nearly 6 percent. 

Capital Economics expects next year to be even tougher though, particularly for 
a communist-ruled regime that bases its legitimacy on economic success. 

“China’s economic slowdown looks set to deepen next year, weighing on equity 
prices and the renminbi. Policy stimulus should put a floor beneath growth 
before the year is out, but won’t drive a strong recovery,” the London-based 
consultancy said in a December 17 report. 

Capital Economics expects official GDP to cool from 6.9 percent in 2017 to 6.6 
percent in 2018. However, its in-house measure of the Chinese economy points to 
an even sharper contraction, from around 5.5 percent currently to just 4 
percent next year. 

The consultancy’s senior China economist, Julian Evans-Pritchard, suggests that 
the housing sector will cool, while export growth will come under increased 
pressure “even if a further escalation in tariffs is avoided.” 

Even with policy stimulus, Capital Economics sees growth slowing until at least 
mid-2019, leading to further weakness in China’s stock market and currency. 

Longer term, the consultancy argues that China’s state-led capitalism will see 
its growth rate slow to just 2 percent by 2030, due to Xi’s decision to “double 
down” on government intervention rather than allowing scope for greater market 
forces. 

Other forecasters also point to a slowdown. The International Monetary Fund  
<https://blogs.imf.org/2018/10/08/global-growth-plateaus-as-economic-risks-materialize/>
 (IMF) expects China’s GDP growth to weaken from 6.9 percent in 2017 to 6.6 
percent this year and 6.2 percent in 2019, putting it well behind fast-rising 
India’s projected 7.4 percent growth. 

In its latest staff report  
<https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/CR/Issues/2018/07/25/Peoples-Republic-of-China-2018-Article-IV-Consultation-Press-Release-Staff-Report-Staff-46121>
 , the Washington-based organization pointed to “tensions in the authorities’ 
strategy between, on the one hand, the stated goals of stabilizing leverage, 
allowing market forces a decisive role, and greater innovation and opening-up, 
and, on the other, still-unsustainable debt growth, the pervasive role of the 
state in the economy, and the relatively restrictive trade and investment 
regime.” 

Elsewhere, the OECD sees China slowing from 6.6 percent GDP growth this year to 
6.3 percent in 2019 and just 6 percent in 2020, amid a weakening world economy. 

“Global economic growth remains strong, but has passed its recent peak,” the 
Paris-based organization said in its latest growth forecasts  
<http://www.oecd.org/newsroom/global-growth-is-slowing-amid-rising-trade-and-financial-risks.htm>
 in which it further cut its projections. 

ANZ Research also tips a cooling in China, from an estimated 6.6 percent GDP 
gain this year to 6.3 percent in 2019, along with a rising current account 
deficit and renewed deflation risks. 

Meanwhile, China’s debt to GDP level could reach 275 percent by the end of 
2019, up from 261 percent in 2018, according to the Bank for International 
Settlements. 

Suggesting China’s slowdown is structural, ANZ Research said, “China’s labor 
force continues to contract, and the trend seems irreversible.” 

Any escalation of the U.S.-China trade war could further damage China’s 
exports, with ANZ Research estimating that $517 billion worth of U.S. tariffs 
imposed on Chinese goods could trim China’s GDP by 0.5 percent. 

The recent arrest in Canada of Meng Wanzhou, chief financial officer of Chinese 
telecommunications giant Huawei, and resulting response by Beijing suggests 
that a near-term détente between the world’s two biggest economies is unlikely. 

Trump’s trade advisor, Peter Navarro told Japan’s  
<https://asia.nikkei.com/Editor-s-Picks/Interview/China-is-trying-to-steal-our-future-Navarro>
 Nikkei it would be “difficult” for a deal to be done within the ninety-day 
ceasefire, saying “half-measures” would be unacceptable on issues such as 
China’s forced technology transfers, cyber spying, state-directed investment 
and other barriers. 

“China is basically trying to steal the future of Japan, the U.S. and Europe, 
by going after our technology,” he said. 

For China, it all adds up to an increasingly difficult outlook for Asia’s Year 
of the Earth Pig, a zodiac sign known for financial fortune. With trouble at 
home and abroad, Beijing will need plenty of good luck. 

Anthony Fensom is an Australia-based freelance writer and consultant with more 
than a decade of experience in Asia-Pacific financial/media industries. 

Image: Reuters. 

  _____  

 

Sent from my iPhone

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