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From:
Jabou Joh <[log in to unmask]>
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The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 30 Apr 2004 23:51:21 EDT
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Washington Times.com

Global View: The Chinese century begins

By Ian Campbell
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL.

Tequisquiapan, , Apr. 30 (UPI) --

The American century is over. A bamboo curtain has lifted. From behind it
emerges the new force in the world economy, the country whose advance will enable
it to claim this century for its own.

This is not a bold prediction. It is an obvious one. China's sheer
geographical size, almost as big as the United States, and the size of its population,
four times greater than America's, means it is going to stand big on the
international stage one day. That day has been brought forward by the country's
abandonment of communism and by the free-market reforms initiated by Deng
Xiao-Ping thirty years ago.

Signs of China's growing influence on the U.S. and world economy were evident
in U.S. markets this week. Something happened that would have been
unthinkable ten years ago: The U.S. stock market dropped, with commodity-related stocks
hit particularly hard, because Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao told Western media
of the need to slow down China's fast growth.

The stock falls may have cast China in a fresh light for many Americans. The
common view of China is as a thief of jobs. China's growth is often seen as
being gained parasitically. Outsourcing is the preoccupation of American
workers. But China's rapid growth is also creating demand for Western goods and
services. Now it is not just the U.S. economy that is growing rapidly. That is a
good thing.

In the first quarter of 2004 the Chinese economy grew, according to the less
than reliable official figures, which probably overstate the rate of growth,
by 9.7 percent. Industrial production was up by a staggering 23.2 percent in
February compared with a year earlier. Retail sales in China rose in January and
February by 10.5 percent compared with the same period in 2003. The number of
people employed in industry rose by 13.3 percent over the same period,
according to Chinese statistics.

Lubricating this rapid growth is abundant money. National statistics show the
narrow M1 money supply and the broader M2 measure rising at an annual rate of
close to 20 percent in recent months, a very fast pace when the official
inflation rate is only 3 percent.

The danger this presents is partly from inflation. Though the inflation rate
is still moderate it has jumped recently and is close to its highest level in
six years. But the greater danger may be from a bubble: an excess of
investment that will eventually end badly. This is the concern China is beginning to
address.

The Chinese Xinhua news agency, on its English language site, writes that on
his recent international tour Premier Wen Jiabao "cited China's ongoing need
for coordinated development of its economy, while recognizing the importance of
balancing the development of urban and rural areas, and between regions."

The phrase "coordinated development" is important. According to Georgina
Wilde, a China expert based in London, "balanced growth" has become the new motto
of the elite that runs China's economy. The search for balance is not just
macroeconomic but geographical.

It is the macroeconomic balancing that the West focuses on and fears. The
Chinese economy has been growing fast. The savings rate is very high -- just as
it was in the Asian countries that went into crisis in 1997-98. The state-owned
banks have terrible loan portfolios but are, Wilde says, "very liquid;" they
have the deposits of a population that is keen to save. The danger may be of
over-investment in productive capacity, causing eventually a swathe of bad
loans, broken banks and unemployed and discontented workers. According to Andy
Xie, Morgan Stanley's China economist, "The investment bubble has become too big
for normal economic measures to achieve a soft landing."

Some of those normal economic measures may be taken shortly. Rumors abound
that China is going to raise interest rates. The benchmark one-year lending rate
is currently 5.3 percent. But a rise in rates may not cool the economy
easily. Bankers familiar with China point out that the state-owned banks do not
operate according to market forces. "Familiarity with a credit officer in a bank
may be enough to guarantee abundant credit, even if the enterprise is
loss-making," a China business consultant told UPI. China's free market economy is
still a (big) baby.

What must be set, however, against the concerns about China's macroeconomic
fragility is that concern about China's banks has been expressed for
years--just as it has about Japan's. Muddle through has been enough to avoid crisis for
now.

Wilde takes this view. "The Chinese know how to manage their macro-economy,"
she says. For her China's more serious problems are "geographical, long-term
and political." High growth has been achieved in the south, close to the coast.
In the north and west poverty and sometimes extreme poverty persists. When
the Chinese leadership speaks of balanced growth it is thinking in part of how
it can bring greater prosperity to inland, rural China. If it does not do so,
political tensions may rise.

It is not only within China that the task that lies ahead is more complex
than the market tends to perceive. At present, with foreign investment flowing
into China and its currency, the renminbi, pegged to the dollar, China's exports
are cheap and rising. The ever-hungry consumers of the United States,
meanwhile, are providing demand for these goods. China then recycles its trade
surplus into purchases of foreign assets. It, along with Japan and Taiwan, is U.S.
President George W. Bush's financier, buying hundreds of billions of U.S.
Treasuries in the past year and thereby helping to fund the U.S. fiscal and current
account deficits. Any disruption to China's ability to do this would drive up
U.S. long term interest rates, hurting the U.S. economy badly.

Meanwhile, other forces, domestic to the United States, threaten to drive up
long interest rates. Inflation has picked up a little in the United States in
the past three months. Industrial production has soared. The housing market
continues to boom extraordinarily. Oil and gasoline prices are very high, as are
the prices of most commodities, notwithstanding this week's falls.

Balance in the U.S. and global economy remains precarious. In the United
States there is inflation and speculation in housing which mirrors the business
investment boom in China. In both countries there is some pickup in inflation
and the possibility that interest rates will rise.

Both countries and the global economy as a whole are vulnerable. Investors
have bid stock and commodity markets up, trusting in sustained recovery in the
United States and in the global economy. Yet there is every sign that in the
two countries that have driven the recovery, growth is not sustainable and
slowdown inevitable and necessary.

These are the immediate problems. But over time China's emergence is the most
positive current aspect of the international economy. The low growth of Japan
and Europe will cease to be so great a problem if China can achieve high
rates of growth in coming decades. China is going to reshape the global economy
and the world. By the middle of this century it seems set to be a super-power.
For good and ill, the United States will no longer be alone.
-O-

Global View is a column published every two weeks that reflects on the global
economy. Comments to [log in to unmask]









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