You are here

Why might China avoid strong inflation?

Aug 04,2022 - Last updated at Aug 04,2022

SHANGHAI  —  When high levels of capital investment spending fueled a sustained increase in Chinese inflation from 1991 to 2011, the authorities quickly brought the situation under control, and over the last decade, CPI has rarely exceeded 2 per cent, compared to 5.4 per cent in 2011. With policymakers in most major economies now losing their grip on price stability, can China continue to keep a lid on inflation this year and next?

To answer this question, it is worth considering how China succeeded in curbing inflation for the past decade. Notably, the government refrained from new rounds of large fiscal and monetary stimulus, and thanks to the central bank’s increased autonomy, money creation and credit growth stopped passively catering to investment projects from below.

After 2015, China’s central bank adopted a prudent tone and adjusted credit allocation to support sectors with excessive debt ratios. Highly polluting industries and the real-estate sector, both of which had driven rapid GDP growth in the past, faced financial repression. At the same time, the central government has tolerated the minimum growth rates that could accommodate steady employment growth.

Today, that tolerance is being tested. Pandemic lockdowns, especially in Shenzhen and Shanghai, have taken a heavy toll on China’s economy. In the second quarter of 2022, Shanghai’s GDP fell by almost 14 per cent. Meanwhile, the real-estate sector, traditionally a major contributor to aggregate demand, is becoming a drag on the economy. In 2020, China’s government introduced “three red lines” to constrain the sector’s access to credit: developers’ liabilities should not exceed 70 per cent of assets, their net debt should not exceed equity, and their cash holdings must be equal to short-term borrowing.

The new debt metrics, together with the COVID-19 pandemic, have put intense pressure on the sector. Once-thriving developers are now facing serious debt crises. With some residential projects having been delayed or halted, home buyers in several cities have had to stop making monthly mortgage payments since the second half of last year.

The good news is that China has indeed kept inflation under control. In the first half of the year, CPI rose by 1.7 per cent, and the government’s inflation forecast for 2022 is about 3 per cent. The bad news is that, while China’s economy has been spared from overheating, this has clearly come at the cost of a sustained slowdown in GDP growth, and even a recession in some areas.

Given this, official forecasts of 5.5 per cent economic growth this year will not be achieved. In the second quarter of this year, China’s growth was barely positive. Though GDP still grew by 2.5 per cent year on year in the first half of 2022, thanks to relatively strong exports, real GDP growth would have to reach at least 8 per cent in the second half of the year to achieve the 5.5 per cent target for 2022, which is of course unlikely to happen. Therefore, the central government would most likely need to revise the lower limit of its growth forecast for July-December downward to 6 per cent, rather than 8 per cent, implying an annual growth rate of 4-4.5 per cent for the entire year.

Given this, China’s government is planning to launch a new round of stimulus for the rest of the year. With unemployment rising, the rate for 16-24-year-olds reached 19.3 per cent in June, up four percentage points year on year, stimulus is urgently needed. But Premier Li Keqiang has been very wise to highlight the importance of not overdoing it.

In the past, stimulus has taken the form of excessive infrastructure investment. But China now has limited room for maneuver. One key constraint is the huge debt overhang from the massive round of stimulus in 2009-11, which poses a serious risk to the financial system. Most of the liquidity that could be used to invest in additional infrastructure projects will still have to be financed by local financing vehicles and local government bonds. While the authorities recently asked China’s policy and development banks to add a total of CN¥1.1 trillion ($163 billion) in new credit lines to support infrastructure projects, new budget outlays, and new debt, might still be required.

Another constraint on stimulus is the threat of imported inflation. The effects of the pandemic, together with the fallout of the Ukraine war, are raising inflation expectations in most Western countries, which are already experiencing rapid increases in consumer prices: CPI in both the United States and the United Kingdom exceeded 9 per cent in June, while eurozone CPI exceeded 8 per cent. Likewise, in Asia, South Korea’s CPI rose 6 per cent year-on-year in June, the largest such increase since November 1998. The increase in Japan’s CPI, 2.4 per cent, exceeded the central bank’s target for a third consecutive month.

As a major energy and food importer, China will find it difficult to insulate itself from the global trend. Two factors explain why CPI in China has not already surged.

First, China’s energy and food importers are all giant, state-owned, state-controlled enterprises whose pricing decisions are tightly regulated. Until inflation expectations are formed, the increase in import costs is not passed on to consumers. This is reflected in China’s producer price index, which has been less stable than CPI over the years.

Second, even as China imports many critical goods, those that are included in the CPI are largely supplied domestically. And, as with importers, the prices charged by state-owned producers in the upper reaches of China’s economy do not fully reflect changes in their costs, owing to government controls.

Consider pork, the single most important item affecting CPI in China, accounting for 2.5 per cent of the index. The counter-cyclical regulation of hog rearing and state subsidies to pork producers have gone a long way toward keeping pork prices, and, thus, CPI, relatively stable.

But, while such regulation can help to cushion external supply shocks, reducing revenues or increasing subsidies will add to the government’s fiscal burden, especially amid global inflation. Add to that already-strained local-government finances and the huge costs of maintaining a zero-COVID policy, and the government’s ability to expand and finance public capital spending will be severely limited.

In this context, it is understandable that China’s government chose to adopt a modest stimulus package. An overly strong stimulus, experience has made clear, would almost inevitably entail excessive monetary expansion, leading to a surge in inflation that would create further challenges for China’s economy in the coming years.

 

Zhang Jun, Dean of the School of Economics at Fudan University, is director of the China Centre for Economic Studies, a Shanghai-based think tank. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022. 

www.project-syndicate.org

up
1 user has voted.
PDF