Chinese Growth Expectations
Where to begin…
The chances of this being
read by anyone are incredibly slim. I am not a reporter. I am not an economist.
I am not anyone with any kind of fame. I am a CPA and energy analyst. Still, for my own sanity I would like a public,
published record of what I have been saying for over a year now: there is a very real chance that the
Chinese economy will not meet growth expectations. Why this viewpoint has
not even been heard by most people, let alone agreed with, is incredibly peculiar
to me. Is it because Chinese growth is considered so vital to global economic health
given austerity measures in Europe and tenuous growth domestically? Is the
thought that China could slow down (let alone go into recession) so frightening
that no one dares breathe the word? Is there some incredible phenomenon of
groupthink occurring? Are people afraid to be the only person who voices an
opposing opinion?
In an age where people
take outlandish stances purely for some degree of notoriety and iconoclasm, few
people raising legitimate concerns
regarding the almost universally held belief of sustained Chinese growth is
amazing. The key to the whole issue is this: the Chinese economy is based on growth, not profitability. The
Chinese government invests tremendous time and resources to expand its growth
and sphere of influence. So long as the growth continues as it has recently,
everything is fine. If it does not, the economy begins to resemble a Ponzi scheme
and everything falls apart. There are some areas of concern regarding the
sustainability of this growth. For ease of reading I have attempted to group
them into two main categories, although they are absolutely intertwined and
overlap with one another.
Costs
China has had one main competitive
advantage in recent memory: low cost of production. For goods that required
less worker expertise, artificially low wage rates and other low cost factors
allowed China unmatched cost to productivity ratios. But the landscape is
changing:
o
Chinese wage rates increased 150% from 1999 to
2006 and are increasing at a rate of 15-20% per year. Per the Boston Consulting
Group, this will reduce China’s labor cost advantage from 55% to 39% by 2015.
o Asian
market LNG (liquefied natural gas) prices range from $12-16 while domestic
natural gas prices have been hovering between $2-4 (the sustainability of which
is another discussion altogether). Asian LNG prices will only continue to go up
as Japan continues its nuclear phase-out and continues to import additional LNG.
This naturally means shipping and energy costs will increase for Chinese
produced products.
o Chinese
land prices are increasing.
o
Indonesia and other nations are increasing their
capabilities and are cost-competitive with Chinese goods.
So we can see that the
Chinese cost advantage has taken a major hit and will likely continue to do so.
But the story does not end there.
Demand
China is not a usable resource rich nation. Supposedly
massive shale resources will not be able to be utilized because water is so
scarce in most parts of the nation. This leaves China to use its lower quality
coal reserves, import higher quality coal from Australia and the U.S., and
import oil and LNG from neighboring Arab nations.
So what is a nation to do
when it does not have the ability to export natural resources and wishes to
grow? It has a few options. It can export services (as India sometimes does).
It can attempt to be self-sufficient and live in isolation (North Korea and
apartheid-era South Africa). Or it can import raw goods, transform them, and
attempt to sell the finished product. This has obviously been the Chinese
approach and has worked well for some time. But consider the environment in
which the Chinese economy now operates.
Chinese domestic demand
cannot begin to match its production. This necessitates significant exports to
other countries, mainly the U.S. and Europe. The current Eurozone crisis (that
has too many factors to even begin to discuss here) threatens the whole global
system. This bleeds over into the U.S. where recovery has been mixed. And when
economic conditions and the outlook are uncertain, those without employment
have hardly anything to spend and those who are employed have a decreased MPC.
In the wake of decreased demand, Chinese exports not only need to be sustained,
they need to grow in order for their
GDP to increase.
This does not even begin
to mention the oftentimes strained relationship between China and some of its
consumer countries. Recently, China not following EU trade sanctions against
Iranian oil exports led to tense conversations between the countries involved.
Differences in governmental and human rights ideologies frequently put China at
odds with the U.S and EU. If any of these things ever caused a significant rift
between China and one of its main consumers, it would have no other means to
recover the loss.
Combined
Effect
The combination of these
factors leaves China in a very unpleasant situation. Japan of the 1990s looked
very similar to the China of today. Growth was exploding at historic rates, its
influence was expanding, and by all counts Japan looked to be the next global
superpower. Then the economic outlook worsened, growth slowed, and the economy
collapsed. That is not a forecast of what will happen to China today, but it
does highlight the possibility and
reason for concern.
The one way China could
help guarantee sustained growth would be to have guaranteed demand. With global
demand decreasing, China would need to capture a greater portion of overall
demand by making sure their goods are the lowest cost. Historically this would
be done by deflation, wage reductions, and general slowdown. The problem?
Growth and inflation go hand in hand. China simply cannot effectively combat inflation while trying to grow at
~9% per year. This means wages will continue
to rise, which takes away its main competitive advantage, which only further
reduces demand. And if demand falls, so does the nation.
Again, this is not a
prediction of what will happen. This is not me looking into a crystal ball to
tell the world China’s fate. China may very well continue to grow and the
economy continue to be stable. This is simply to highlight that the almost unanimously
held belief that China will undoubtedly and absolutely grow and expand is far
from true.
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