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Breaking China’s investment addiction

China’s economic growth model is running out of steam.

China’s investments in real estate and infrastructure suffer from the declining efficiency of investment capital. Photo: Bloomberg

China’s investments in real estate and infrastructure suffer from the declining efficiency of investment capital. Photo: Bloomberg

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China’s economic growth model is running out of steam.

According to the World Bank, in the 30 years after Deng Xiaoping initiated economic reform, investment accounted for 6 to 8 percentage points of the country’s 9.8 per cent average annual economic growth rate, while improved productivity contributed only 2 to 4 percentage points.

Faced with sluggish external demand, weak domestic consumption, rising labour costs and low productivity, China depends excessively on investment to drive economic growth.

Although this model is unsustainable, China’s over-reliance on investment is showing no signs of waning. In fact, as China undergoes a process of capital deepening (increasing capital per worker), even more investment is needed to contribute to higher output and technological advancement in various sectors.

In 1995-2010, when China’s average annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate was 9.9 per cent, fixed-asset investment (investment in infrastructure and real-estate projects) increased by a factor of 11.2, rising at an average annual rate of 20 per cent.

Total fixed-asset investment amounted to 41.6 per cent of GDP, on average, peaking at 67 per cent of GDP in 2009, a level that would be unthinkable in most developed countries.

Also driving China’s high investment rate is the declining efficiency of investment capital, reflected in China’s high incremental capital-output ratio (annual investment divided by annual output growth), or ICOR.

In 1978-2008 — the age of economic reform and opening — China’s average ICOR was a relatively low 2.6, reaching its peak between the mid-1980s and the early 1990s. Since then, China’s ICOR has more than doubled, demonstrating the need for significantly more investment to generate an additional unit of output.

VICIOUS CIRCLE OF OVERPRODUCTION

As the accumulation and deepening of capital accelerate growth, they perpetuate the low-efficiency investment pattern and stimulate overproduction.

When production exceeds domestic demand, producers are compelled to expand exports, creating an export-oriented, capital-intensive industrial structure that supports rapid economic growth.

But if external demand lags, products accumulate, prices decline and profits fall. While credit expansion can offset this to some degree, increased production based on credit expansion inevitably leads to large-scale financial risk. Thus, a combination of investment, debt and credit is forming a self-reinforcing risky cycle that encourages overproduction.

In the wake of the global financial crisis, Chinese banks were instructed to extend credit and invest in large-scale infrastructure projects as part of the country’s massive monetary and fiscal stimulus. As a result, China’s credit/GDP ratio rose by 40 percentage points in 2008-2011, with most of the lending directed towards large-scale investment by state-owned enterprises (SOEs).

In the last two years, bank credit has become the main source of capital in China — a risky situation, given the low quality and inadequacy of bank capital.

Meanwhile, strong currency demand has led China’s M2 (broad money supply) to increase to 180 per cent of GDP — the highest level in the world. The massive wall of liquidity that has resulted has triggered inflation, sent real-estate prices soaring, and fuelled a sharp rise in debt.

A MAJOR CREDIT RISK

Given that it is in local governments’ interest to maintain high economic growth rates, many are borrowing to fund large-scale investment in real estate and infrastructure projects. The active fiscal policy adopted during the financial crisis enabled the rapid expansion of local official financing platforms (state-backed investment companies through which local governments raise money for fixed-asset investment), from 2,000 in 2008 to more than 10,000 last year.

But, as local government debt grows, Chinese banks have begun to regard real estate and local financing platforms as a major credit risk.

Likewise, with key industries facing overproduction and slowing profit growth, firms’ deficits are growing — and their debts are becoming increasingly risky. Indeed, the proportion of deficit spending among enterprises is on the rise, and the accounts-receivable turnover rate is falling.

By the third quarter of 2012, industrial enterprises’ receivables totalled 8.2 trillion yuan (S$1.63 trillion), up 16.5 per cent year-on-year, forcing many to borrow even more to fill the gap, which has driven up debt further.

According to GK Dragonomics, corporate debt amounted to 108 per cet of GDP in 2011 and reached a 15-year high of 122 per cent of GDP last year.

Many heavily indebted companies are SOEs and most of the new projects that they initiate are “super-projects”, with the return on investment taking longer than creditor banks expect. Indeed, some highly indebted firms’ capital chains may well rupture in the next two years, when they reach their peak period for debt repayment.

INCREASINGLY FRAGILE

As a result, China’s financial system is becoming increasingly fragile. The expansion of infrastructure investment — which, according to some reports, exceeds 50 trillion yuan, including highway and high-speed railway construction — will lead to the expansion of banks’ balance sheets.

The investment loans and massive debts among local financing platforms, together with the off-record credit channelled through the “shadow” banking system, are increasing the risk that non-performing loans will soon shake the banking sector.

To reach the next stage of economic development, China needs a new growth model. Reliance on investment will not enable China to achieve stable, long-term growth and prosperity; on the contrary it may well inflict serious long-term damage on economic performance. PROJECT SYNDICATE

Zhang Monan is a fellow of the China Information Center and of the China Foundation for International Studies, and a researcher at the China Macroeconomic Research Platform.

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