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Is China’s economic luck running out?

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In Brief

At the end of April 2015, FXI — China’s prestigious Xinhua China 25 index, a key indicator of China’s stock market value — climbed dramatically, reaching over US$52 per share. By 5 September, the index had dropped to a low of about US$33 per share, representing the destruction of almost 40 per cent of its value for the period and trillions of dollars in total. Both retail and institutional investors in China felt the bite. As financial markets react, the question remains: what is happening in China? Is the Chinese economy likely to collapse? And what will be the impact on the rest of the world?

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To understand the current crisis, one must turn to some recent history. In 2013, President Xi Jinping vowed to liberalise financial markets in China. The Chinese government allowed a small group of hedge funds from the United States and Britain to raise money directly from Chinese investors. In 2014, the government opened the Shanghai stock markets for the first time in history to allow foreigners to directly purchase A-shares of Chinese domestic stocks.

These moves were hailed by the financial community and by free-market economists, seemingly marking a new round of financial liberalisation and China’s further integration into the global financial markets. For China, it was another step in the direction of internationalising the renminbi and attracting more foreign portfolio investment. But it should be noted that only about 1 per cent of China’s domestic market value is owned by foreigners.

Then came the recent crisis beginning with the first dramatic market correction in mid-June 2015.

The Chinese, accustomed to a planned economy, responded predictably to the crisis. First, they tried to fix it via market mechanisms. Brokers were instructed to tell their hedge fund clients to stop short-selling, which would allow them to benefit from a fall in the value of shares. China asked newspapers to stop publishing negative stories about the financial markets. And it arrested executives at Citic Securities (China’s largest brokerage), an employee of the China Securities Regulatory Commission and a journalist at Caijing, a key financial magazine. Of course, these measures failed to stem the deteriorating conditions in the market. Instead, they raised suspicions of a larger looming problem: the ‘coming collapse of China’.

A better understanding of what is happening in China today requires a long-term view of the market. The Chinese financial market is a high-risk, high-return market characterised by high volatility. If you invested in China 10 years ago at the launch of the FXI ETF index, you would still have beaten the Dow Jones, although not by much. Depending on when you invested, your return would be markedly different, in either a positive or negative direction. Timing is everything in China’s financial markets. This may explain why so many of China’s retail investors follow casino-style ‘investment’ behaviour, rather than being driven by fundamentals and valuation.

So, why is China’s market punctuated with such volatility? The answer is in China’s governance. Governance, according to the World Bank, includes such things as ‘the capacity of the government to effectively formulate and implement sound policies, and the respect of citizens and the state for the institutions that govern economic and social interactions among them’. Using multiple indices, researchers from the World Bank found that, despite the economic miracle of China and apparent market reforms, the presence of corruption and the rule of law have not markedly improved since 1996.

So what does this all mean? It means that China’s recent market woes are business as usual. The market is likely to continue to experience gyrations as long as there is no serious fundamental reform. For China to experience gradual and stable financial markets, it must change its governance regime to be in line with norms in developed and well-functioning markets, such as those in Singapore and Germany.

China will continue to deliver above-average, long-term financial returns because its real economy is still emerging. But to take advantage of these returns, investors must have patience.

Dr Ilan Alon is professor of strategy and international marketing at the University of Agder, Norway and a research scholar at Georgetown University. Alon is also editor-in-chief of International Journal of Emerging Markets (Emerald, UK). Alon’s research focus on China yielded numerous research articles and books, including Entrepreneurial and Business Elites of China (Emerald, 2011) and Chinese International Investments (Palgrave, 2012).

2 responses to “Is China’s economic luck running out?”

  1. Your remark says it all: “Despite the economic miracle of China and apparent market reforms, the presence of corruption and the rule of law have not markedly improved since 1996.” It applies not only to China but to Russia, most of Africa, and Arabia. For a nation to succeed, corruption must be brought under control.

    • I would argue that the presence of corruption in China had risen rampantly by 2013 but has fallen since the current leadership took over in 2013. Obviously, President Xi’s anti-corruption campaign has captured some former corrupt officials including some very high ranked ones.
      The recent financial market turbulences reflects the inexperience and the lack of understanding of financial markets by the current leadership. It has been reported they encouraged people to buy into the market that propelled the Chinese financial markets to about 150per cent rise in a year. Of course, that kind of exuberance cannot last for ever and sooner or later the valuations would cause corrections: that was exactly what happened in the Chinese stock markets.
      Is China’s economic luck running out? It is unlikely in the medium to longer run, even though in the short run, it seems every factor seems to work against China’s economic luck. The Chinese leadership cannot afford to let the economy to slow too much and for too long, as they work out successful strategies to have the Chinese economy back on track to the so called medium to high growth. The Chinese government was for some time reluctant to use fiscal stimulus, but has probably realised it has to use some sort of stimulus before its economic transformation into an innovative and service focused takes shape.
      Personally, I think the Chinese government should set a target of about 7.2per cent for the next two decades so it can double in ten years and double again by 2035. That would mirror what Japan did in its “income-doubling plan”.
      It will not be easy, but it should be achievable if China can upgrade its economy to greater value-added in the international economic value chain. Of course, if it will help and make it easier should China be successful in taking advantages of the current digital technological and economic disruption and in becoming an innovative economy as its Premier has been calling for. But that will certainly take time. So in the short term, traditional policy tools have to be used.

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