[LINK] "The coming China crash"
Dec. 5th, 2007 07:15 pmAsia Times hosts Martin Hutchinson's interesting article "The coming China crash. In it, he argues that a very badly run financial sector that has made many very bad investments will sooner or later result in a sharp economic slowdown. Accoding to Hutchinson, the best-case scenario is a repetition of the lost decade of growth that Japan experienced in the 1990s.
With China and the United States both experiencing stagnant economic growth in this worst-case scenario, Hutchinson suggests, the world economy may be hamstrung. Worse, he suggests that China's authoritarian poliical system might well shift in most nationalist and militaristic direction, with obvious consequences for the wider world.
It may not however have the choice. One of the factors that kept Japan out of real trouble in the 1990s was continued strong growth in the US and world economies; thus its magnificent export industries were able to continue growing, albeit at a slow rate, and provide a certain amount of traction for the economy as a whole. However, China will find it difficult to do the same, since the next decade does not seem likely to be a period of robust world growth. Far from it. The United States seems fated to endure at least a few years of very sluggish growth due to its housing market crash, and Britain appears to be in a similar mess, so even relatively robust growth in the resurgent economies of Germany and Japan may not be sufficient to keep Chinese exports growing.
It can allow the banks to work their way out of their bad loans, condemning the domestic economy to probably a decade of little growth and extremely tight credit (high Chinese savings would alleviate this problem, but they will be trapped in the Chinese banks because the authorities foolishly do not allow Chinese citizens to invest abroad). Alternatively, it can inject more or less its entire foreign exchange reserves into the domestic banking system in order to recover its bad debts, which would allow the Chinese economy to continue expanding, but at a cost of devastatingly high inflation from the additional money pumped into the system (the $100 billion plus of Chinese bank initial public offerings carried out in 2006-07, pumped into the domestic economy, already appears to be worsening Chinese inflation and China Investment’s $130 billion will doubtless further aggravate the problem.)
We have seen societies with low economic growth, very high inequality (as China has now) and persistently high inflation; they are collectively known as Latin America. Since China also has much of the corruption that bedevils Latin America and its government lacks any genuine understanding of the free market and is increasingly dominated by special interests, it may indeed be fated to follow a Latin American growth path for the next few decades, with a tiny entrenched elite enriching itself at the expense of the disfranchised masses. That would be the worst possible outcome for the Chinese people, but it is not by any means impossible.
With China and the United States both experiencing stagnant economic growth in this worst-case scenario, Hutchinson suggests, the world economy may be hamstrung. Worse, he suggests that China's authoritarian poliical system might well shift in most nationalist and militaristic direction, with obvious consequences for the wider world.