The China Myth Debunked
Middle-income trap springs for ageing giant...
MYTHS die hard, writes Jim Rickards in The Daily
Reckoning.
Among these is the great myth that China is poised to take over the world. Today I'll debunk that
myth.
No
one seriously disputes the importance of China to the global economy. It's the world's second-largest
economy after the US and
accounts for 17% of global GDP (or an even larger per centage if one uses an alternative accounting
method called purchasing power
parity).
It has the world's second-largest population at 1.41 billion people,
just slightly behind India. It
has the third-largest landmass in the world behind Russia and Canada. China also has the world's
third-largest nuclear arsenal after
Russia and the US
But size can be deceptive. Most observers translate China's
large economy into the status
of global superpower soon to surpass the US in economic and military strength.
That extrapolation has been a
chimera for some time. In reality, China's economy is fragile and weakening by the day.
China may soon find
itself in economic turmoil including a credit crisis, currency crisis and economic recession all at the
same time. Following is a
close look at China's inherent weakness. Unfortunately for US investors, China's problems threaten to
drag the global economy down
with it.
China's economic problems exist at two levels – the long-term macro
level and the short-term
technical level. Let's consider these in order: At the long-term level, China is confronting three
material obstacles – the
middle-income trap, declining demographics and wasted investment.
The
middle-income trap afflicts developing
economies that have reached the middle-income level of about $10,000 per capita annually. Moving from
low-income (about $5,000 per
capita annually) is straightforward.
Countries move populations from rural to
urban environments, build
suitable housing and infrastructure, attract direct foreign investment with cheap labor and low
operating costs, engage in
assembly-type manufacturing and run significant trade surpluses by exporting the manufactured
goods.
The
difficulty is in moving from middle-income to high-income ($20,000 per capita annually or higher). For
that, low value-added
manufacturing isn't enough. It's necessary to move to high-tech, high value-added manufacturing, which
requires original research and
development and access to high-tech tools such as semiconductor manufacturing equipment.
China has acquired
some of these tools through theft of intellectual property, but not enough. China also faces fierce
competition from those already
engaged in high-tech manufacturing including Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore and Japan.
Only a handful of
countries have ever made the move from middle-income to high-income, including those just mentioned.
Many more including Turkey,
Malaysia, Indonesia, India and South Africa are stuck in the same middle-income trap as
China.
The prospects
of China breaking out of the middle-income bracket are slim, especially now that foreign direct
investment is moving toward India and
Vietnam and away from China. This conundrum alone is enough to put the brakes on Chinese
growth.
China is
also confronted with what will become the greatest demographic disaster since the Black Death in the
14th century. This is the bitter
fruit of China's one-child policy from 1980-2015 combined with mass infanticide of girls. The
demographic challenge is increased by
greater educational and career opportunities for women, which impacts family formation, and an historic
shift in the role of the
family.
China's population may decline from 1.41 billion to 750 million over
the next 50 years. That's a loss
of over 650 million people.
Considering that one definition of GDP is
working-age population x productivity,
it follows that China's GDP will suffer a spectacular decline over the remainder of this century. (Note:
The total GDP will decline
but per capita GDP may be maintained because the population itself is shrinking.)
Finally, China has wasted
much of the wealth it did earn during the past 30 years with bad investments in unneeded infrastructure.
A mature economy devotes
about 25% of GDP to new investment (plant, equipment, homes, transportation, etc.) and about 65% to
consumption. (The remaining 10% is
split between trade surpluses or deficits and government spending.)
In China,
that split is reversed. About
45% of GDP goes to investment and only about 25% goes to consumption.
That
amount of investment can lead to
high productivity gains in the future if it is spent intelligently on essential infrastructure,
transportation, high-tech plants and
equipment as well as research and development.
Instead, China wasted the money
on "ghost cities" (ample
infrastructure with no residents or business tenants) and extravagant white elephants such as the
Nanjing South train station, which
has marble walls and 128 escalators but very few train passengers.
Such show
projects do produce short-term
jobs and demand for copper, glass, steel and aluminum. But when the project is finished, the jobs
disappear (unless diverted to
another wasteful project) and the infrastructure is nonproductive with high maintenance
costs.
If Chinese GDP
were adjusted for losses due to wasted investment in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles, the reported growth
figures of the past 30 years would have been reduced 20% or more. Those losses are real whether the
figures are adjusted or
not.
Based on these three factors – the middle-income trap, declining
demographics and wasted investment –
the so-called Chinese miracle has turned into a dead end.
China's failing
growth engine is not due solely to
these long-term factors. Among the short-term headwinds to growth are an excessive debt-to-GDP ratio, a
drying up of direct foreign
investment, a Dollar shortage and a rapidly declining currency.
Harvard
economists Carmen Reinhart and Ken
Rogoff have demonstrated that debt-to-GDP ratios in excess of 90% will reduce the Keynesian multiplier
of additional debt-financed
government spending below 1.0.
This means that for economies in that condition,
if they borrow a Dollar and
spend a Dollar, they receive less than a Dollar of added GDP. Of course, this process drives the ratio
even higher (since the GDP
denominator grows more slowly than the debt numerator), which slows growth even further.
In plain language,
you can't borrow your way out of a debt crisis.
China has one of the highest
debt-to-GDP ratios in the world,
well over 300%. (Much of this debt is buried at the provincial level or in state-controlled banks rather
than sovereign bonds, but the
debt/growth dynamic is the same.) This debt overhang will retard Chinese growth independent of the other
factors mentioned in this
article.
Because of trade wars, tariff wars and deteriorating Chinese-US
relations, direct foreign investment
is being diverted from China to other high-growth centers, including India. China's ample (but
declining) labor force cannot be
productive without foreign direct investment to fund state-of-the-art manufacturing facilities and new
technology.
China is doomed to stagnate along the lines of the former Soviet Union without a continual
supply of new capital and
technology.
China's Dollar-denominated trade surpluses cannot fill the gap
because those reserves are needed
to service Dollar-denominated debt of Chinese state-owned enterprises and to prop up Chinese bank
balance sheets.
That's the real reason why Chinese holdings of US Treasury securities are declining. It's
not because China is "dumping"
Treasuries. It's because China must sell the Treasuries to obtain Dollars to prop up its debts and to
deal with a global Dollar
shortage.
All of these negative trends are expressed in the rapid decline of
the USD/CNY exchange rate. After
hitting an interim peak of 7.10 to $1.00 on Jan. 31, 2024, the Chinese Yuan broke through a central bank
target of 7.25 in mid-June
and is now trading at 7.27. CNY will continue this decline, perhaps hitting 7.30 to $1.00 in the weeks
ahead.
A crashing currency is not as advantageous for exports as many imagine since China's value added on
exports is only about 5%. It has
to import most of the inputs it uses to manufacture exports from Japan, South Korea, Germany and
Taiwan.
A
declining currency increases the cost of those imports and reduces China's competitiveness. It also
makes foreign direct investment
less attractive and hurts China's efforts to move to a consumer economy by causing inflation on imported
goods.
It would be a serious matter if China were slowing rapidly and the problems were confined
to China. They're not. Slower
growth in China hurts Japanese banks, which are heavily invested there. It hurts South Korean, Taiwanese
and Australian exporters that
rely on Chinese markets.
It also contributes to a global slowdown that's
already affected Germany, France,
Japan and the UK And it hurts US investors who are facing a wave of company failures and bond
defaults.
The
US won't be insulated from this global slowdown that threatens to become a global recession and
financial crisis. I believe US
investors should dump Chinese stocks and ETFs and reduce equity holdings generally.
We're entering another
"cash is king" stage with China leading the way.











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