Dissecting the 'Chinese Miracle'
By Peter
ZeihanThe "Chinese miracle" has been a leading economic story for
several years now. The headlines are familiar: "China's GDP Growth Fastest in
Asia." "China Overtakes United Kingdom as Fourth-Largest Economy." "China
Becomes World's Second-Largest Energy Consumer." "China Revises GDP Growth Rates
Upward -- Again." Everywhere, one can find news articles about China, rising
like a phoenix from the economic debris of its Maoist system to change and
challenge the world in every way imaginable.
But just like the phoenix,
the idea of an inevitable Chinese juggernaut is a myth.
Moreover,
Western markets have been at least subconsciously aware of this for a decade.
More than half of the $1.1 trillion in foreign direct investment that has flowed
into China since 1995 has not been foreign at all, but money recirculated
through tax havens by various local businessmen and governing officials looking
to avoid taxation. Of the remainder, Western investment into China has remained
startlingly constant at about $7 billion annually. Only Asian investors whose
systems are often plagued (like Japan's) by similar problems of profitability or
(like Indonesia's) outright collapse have been increasing their exposure in
China.

Once
the numbers are broken down, it's clear that the reality of China does not live
up to the hype. While it is true that growth rates have been extremely strong,
growth does not necessarily equal health. China's core problem, the inability to
allocate capital efficiently, is embedded in its development model. The goals of
that model -- rapid urbanization, mass employment and maximization of capital
flow -- have been met, but to the detriment of profitability and return on
capital. In time, China is likely to find itself undone not only by its
failures, but also by its successes.
The Chinese
ModelUntil very recently, China's economic system operated in this
way:
State-owned banks held a monopoly on deposits in the country,
allowing them to take advantage of Asians' legendary savings rate and thus
ensuring a massive pool of capital. The state banks then lent to state-owned
enterprises (SOEs). This served two purposes. First, it kept the money in the
family and assisted Beijing in maintaining control of the broader economic and
political system. Second, because loans were disbursed frequently and at
subsidized rates -- and banks did not insist upon strict repayment -- the state
was able to guarantee ongoing employment to the Chinese masses.
This last
point was -- and remains -- of critical importance to the Chinese Politburo:
they know what can happen when the proletariat rises in anger. That is, after
all, how they became the Politburo in the first place.
The cost of
keeping the money circulating in this way, of course, is that China's state
firms are now so indebted as to make their balance sheets a joke, and the banks
are swimming in bad debts -- independent estimates peg the amount at around
35-50 percent of the country's GDP. Yet so long as the economic system remains
closed, the process can be kept up ad infinitum: After all, what does it matter
if the banks are broke if they are state-backed
and shielded from
competition
and enjoy exclusive access to all of the country's
depositors?
This system, initiated under Deng Xiaoping in 1979, served
China well for years. It yielded unrestricted growth and rapid urbanization, and
helped China emerge as a major economic power. And so long as China kept its
financial system under wraps, it would remain invulnerable.
But the
dawning problem is that China is not in its own little world: It is now a World
Trade Organization member, and nearly half of its GDP is locked up in
international trade. Its WTO commitments dictate that by December, Beijing must
allow any interested foreign companies to compete in the Chinese banking market
without restriction. But without some fairly severe adjustments, this shift
would swiftly suck the capital out of the Chinese banking system. After all, if
you are a Chinese depositor, who would you put your money with -- a foreign bank
offering 2 percent interest and a passbook that means something, or a local
state bank that can (probably) be counted on to give your money back (without
interest)?
The Chinese are well aware of their problems, and perhaps
their greatest asset at this point is that -- unlike the Soviets before them --
they are hiding neither the nature nor the size of the problem. Chinese state
media have been reporting on the bad loan issue for the better part of two
years, and state officials regularly consult each other as well as academics and
businesspeople on what precisely they should do to avert a catastrophe.
The result has been a series of stopgap measures to buy time. Among
these, the most far-reaching initiative has been a partial reform of the
financial sector. The government has founded a series of asset-management
companies to take over the bad loans from the state banks, thus scrubbing them
free of most of the nonperforming loans. The scrubbed banks are then opened up
so that interested foreign investors can purchase shares.
So far as it
goes, this is a win-win scenario: Foreign banks get access to assets in-country
before the December jump-in date, and the state banks avoid meltdown. In
addition, a measure of foreign management expertise is injected into the system
that hopefully will teach the state banks how to lend appropriately and -- if
all goes well -- lead to the formation of a healthy financial sector. At the
same time, the deep-pocketed foreign companies come away with a vested interest
in keeping their new partners -- and by extension, the Chinese government --
fully afloat.
The only downside is that central government, through its
asset-management firms, assumes responsibility for financially supporting all of
China's loss-making state-owned enterprises.
But this rather ingenious
banking shell game addresses only the immediate problem of a looming financial
catastrophe. Left completely untouched is the existence of a few hundred billion
dollars in dud loans -- linked to tens of thousands of dud firms for which the
central government is now directly responsible.
Which still leaves for
China the unsettled question: "Now what do we do?"
Two Opposing
"Solutions" As can be expected from a country that just underwent a
leadership change, there are two competing solutions.
The first solution
belongs to the generation of leadership personified by Deng Xiaoping and Jiang
Zemin, and could be summed up as a philosophy of "Grow faster and it will all
work out." It could be said that during Jiang's presidency, while the leadership
certainly perceived China's debt problem, they -- like their counterparts in
Japan -- felt that attacking the problem
at
its source -- the banking system -- would lead to an economic collapse (not
to mention infuriate political supporters who benefited greatly from the system
of cheap credit).
Jiang's recommendation was that everyone should build
everything imaginable in hopes that the resulting massive growth and development
would help catapult China to "developed country" status -- or, at the very
least, raise overall wealth levels sufficiently that the population would not
turn rebellious. In the minds of Jiang and his generation of leaders, the belief
was that only rapid economic growth -- defined as that in excess of 8 percent
annually -- could contain growing unemployment and urbanization pressures and
thus hold social instability at bay.
The second solution comes from the
current generation of leadership, represented by President Hu Jintao. This
solution calls for rationalizing both development goals and credit allocation.
The leadership wants to eliminate the "growth for its own sake" philosophy,
consolidate inefficient producers and upgrade everything with a liberal dose of
technology. Key to this strategy is a centrally planned effort to focus economic
development on the inland areas that need it most -- and this entails tighter
control over credit. Hu wants loans to go only to enterprises that will use
money efficiently or to projects that serve specific national development goals
-- narrowing the rich-poor, urban-rural and coastal-interior gaps in particular.
There are massive drawbacks to either solution.
Regional and
local governors enthusiastically seized upon Jiang's program to massively expand
their own personal fiefdoms. And as corporate empires of these local leaders
grew, so too did Chinese demand for every conceivable industrial commodity. One
result was the massive increases in commodity prices of 2003 and 2004, but the
results for the Chinese economy were negligible. China consumes 12 percent of
global energy, 25 percent of aluminum, 28 percent of steel and 42 percent of
cement -- but is responsible for only 4.3 percent of total global economic
output. Ultimately, while "solution" espoused by Jiang's generation did
forestall a civil breakdown, it also saddled China with thousands of new
non-competitive projects, even more bad debt, and a culture of corruption so
deep that cases of applied capital punishment for graft and embezzlement have
soared into the thousands.
Yet the potential drawbacks of the solution
offered by Hu's generation are even worse. In attempting to consolidate,
modernize and rationalize Jiang's legacy, Hu's government is butting heads with
nearly all of the country's local and regional leaderships. These people did
quite well for themselves under Jiang and are not letting go of their wealth
easily. Such resistance has forced the Hu government to reform by a thousand
pinpricks, needling specific local leaders on specific projects while using
control of the asset management firms as a financial hammer. After all, since
the central government relieved the state banks of their bad loan burden, it now
has the perfect tool to strip power from those local leaders who prove
less-than-enthusiastic about the changes in government policy.
Or at
least that is how it is supposed to work. Local government officials have become
so entrenched in their economic and political fiefdoms that they are, at best,
simply ignoring the central government or, at worst, actively impeding central
government edicts.
Hu's team is indeed making progress, but with the
problem mammoth and the resistance both entrenched and stubborn, they can move
only so fast for fear of risking a broader collapse or rebellion. And this does
not take into consideration Beijing's efforts to strengthen the Chinese interior
-- where the poorest Chinese actually live. Complicating matters even more, Hu's
strategy relies upon the central government's ability to wring money out of the
wealthy coastal regions to pay for the reconstruction of the
interior.
That has made the coastal leaders even more disgruntled.
However, they have come upon a fresh source of funding, replacing the
traditional sources of capital that now are drying up as a result of the
personnel changes in Beijing: the underground lending system, which was spurred
by the official government monopoly over banks in years past. The central
government now estimates that the underground banking sector is worth 800
billion yuan, or some 28 percent of the value of all loans granted in
country.
Dealing with Failure -- And SuccessThe question
in our mind is which strategy will fail -- or even succeed -- first. If Jiang's
system prevails, then growth will continue, along with the attendant rise in
commodity prices -- but at the cost of growing income disparity and
environmental degradation. The likely outcome of such "success" would be a broad
rebellion by the country's interior regions as money becomes increasingly
concentrated in the coastal regions long favored by Jiang. And that is assuming
the financial system does not collapse first under its own weight.
Local
rebellions in China's rural regions have already become common, but two of are
particular note.
In March, the villagers of
Huaxi
in the Zhejiang region protested against a local official who had used his
connections to build a chemical plant on the outskirts of town. When rumors of
police brutality surfaced, some 20,000 villagers quite literally seized control
of the town from 3,000 security personnel. Before all was said and done, the
villagers invited regional press agencies in to chronicle events in the town
that had told the Politburo to go to hell, and started burning police property
and parading riot control equipment before anyone who would watch. They actually
sold tickets to their rebellion. Huaxi marked the first time local officials
actually lost control of a town.
Then, in December, protests erupted
against a local official in
Shanwei,
who had similarly lined his pockets with the money that was supposed to have
been made available to farmers displaced by his expanding wind-power farm. The
local governor figured that since he was investing not just in an
energy-generating project in energy-starved China, but a green energy project,
that he would have carte blanche to run events as he saw fit. He was right. When
the protests turned violent, government forces opened fire -- the first
authorized use of force by government troops against protesters since the
Tiananmen Square incident in 1989.
Such events are, in part, evidence of
a degree of success for the strategy espoused by Jiang's generation. The
grow-grow-grow policy results in massive demand for labor by tens of thousands
of economically questionable -- and typically state-owned -- corporations. This,
in turn, draws workers from the rural regions to the rapidly expanding urban
centers by the tens of millions. The dominant sense among those who are left
behind -- or those who find their urban experiences less-than-savory -- is that
they have been exploited. This is particularly true in places like Shanwei, on
the outskirts of urban regions, when urban governors begin confiscating
agricultural land for their pet projects.
But for all the complications
created by Jiang's solution to China's economic challenges, it is Hu's
counter-solution that could truly shatter the system. In addition to dealing
with all the corrupt flotsam and high-priced jetsam of Jiang's policies, Hu must
rip down what Jiang set out to accomplish: thousands of fresh enterprises that
are unencumbered by profit concerns. A steady culling of China's non-competitive
industry is perhaps a good idea from the central government's point of view --
and essential for the transformation of the Chinese economy into one that would
actually be viable in the long term -- but not if you happen to be one of the
local officials who personally benefited from Jiang's policies.
The
approach of Hu's generation is nothing less than an attempt to recast the
country in a mold that is loosely based on Western economics and finance. Even
in the best-case scenario, the central government not only needs to put
thousands of mewling firms to the sword and deal with the massive unemployment
that will result, it also needs to eliminate the businessmen and governing
officials who did well under the previous system (which did not even begin to
loosen its grip until 2003). And the only way Beijing can pay for its efforts to
develop the interior is to tax the coast dry at the same time it is being gutted
politically and economically.
The challenge is to keep this undeclared
war at a tolerable level, even while ratcheting up pressure on the coastal lords
in terms of both taxation and rationalization. But just as Jiang's "solution"
faces the doomsday possibility of a long rural march to rebellion, Hu's strategy
well might trigger a coastal revolution. As the central government gradually
increases its pressure on the assets and power of China's coastal lords, there
is a danger that those in the coastal regions will do what anyone would in such
a situation: reach out for whatever allies -- economic and political -- might
become available. And if China's history is any guide, they will not stop
reaching simply because they reach the ocean.
The last time China's
coastal provinces rebelled, they achieved de facto independence -- by helping
foreign powers secure spheres of influence -- during the Boxer Rebellion. This
resulted, among things, in a near-total breakdown of central authority.
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