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Stephen Roach warns that the Chinese government's response to tough problems is being driven by stale tactics and ideology

Economy / opinion
Stephen Roach warns that the Chinese government's response to tough problems is being driven by stale tactics and ideology
Xi on TV screen

China is at a critical juncture. Its deflation-prone debt-intensive economy is seriously underperforming. Its government has become embroiled in a major superpower conflict with the United States. And it is staring down the barrel of a demographic crisis. Worst of all, Chinese authorities are responding to these challenges more with ideology and stale tactics from the past, rather than with breakthrough reforms. Imaginative solutions to tough problems are in scarce supply.

As a diehard China optimist for most of the past 25 years, I haven’t come to this conclusion lightly. My Yale course, “The Next China,” made the case for a powerful shift in the Chinese growth model, from an investment- and export-led economy to one driven by domestic consumption.

Yes, I worried that China’s porous social safety net – both for retirement and health care – could lead to a rise in fear-driven precautionary saving that would inhibit consumer demand. But, viewing these concerns more as challenges than risks, I remained convinced that China would ultimately rebalance its economy.

I began to have serious doubts in 2021, when Chinese regulators clamped down on internet-platform companies. With this assault taking dead aim at entrepreneurs, I warned of a mounting “animal spirits deficit.” In my latest book, Accidental Conflict, I widened my concerns to include the implications of President Xi Jinping’s “common prosperity” campaign, which targeted the wealth creation of Chinese risk-takers. And then, a year ago, I threw in the proverbial towel; in “A China Optimist’s Lament,” I argued that the government’s newfound fixation on national security would further diminish China’s potential for economic dynamism.

I have taken a fair amount of flak for this change of heart, especially from long-biased US politicians and their media consorts. Surprisingly, the Chinese have been more open to debate, especially over the possibility that the Next China is starting to look more like the Next Japan. After discussing these concerns with a wide range of senior officials, business leaders, academics, former students, and friends in a series of visits to China over the past few months, three conclusions emerge:

First, the Chinese policy response to a flagging economy is unenlightened. The government is relying on what it has long called “proactive fiscal stimulus and prudent monetary policy” to support economic growth of around 5% in 2024 (Premier Li Qiang will officially announce the target at the National People’s Congress in March). As was the case in the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98 and the 2008 global financial crisis, China is once again resorting to the brute force of large cash infusions to address today’s major dislocations in the property market, local-government financing vehicles, and the stock market.

Second, such short-term countercyclical tactics do not effectively address China’s long-term structural problems. According to estimates by the United Nations, China’s working-age population peaked in 2015 and will decline by nearly 220 million by 2049. Basic economics tells us that maintaining steady GDP growth with fewer workers requires extracting more value-added from each one, meaning that productivity growth is vital. But with China now drawing more support from low-productivity state-owned enterprises, and with the higher-productivity private sector remaining under intense regulatory pressure, the prospects for an acceleration of productivity growth appear dim.

Lastly, the government keeps sharpening its focus on internal security. This is true of recent anti-corruption efforts aimed at the military, as well as the on-again, off-again, and now back on-again regulatory assault on the private sector. For example, the gaming industry is once more under scrutiny, as are several high-profile foreign executives. Moreover, the recently concluded Third Plenum of China’s Central Commission for Discipline Inspection underscored the importance of ideological discipline as a foundational value. To that end, the Communist Party has effectively taken over some of the country’s leading educational institutions, including Tsinghua, Shanghai Jiaotong, Nanjing, and Fuzhou Universities.

I worry most about Chinese productivity, especially as aging now takes a toll on its workforce. Productivity is just as important for China’s market-based socialist system as it is for a capitalist economy. Academics have drawn attention to several prominent sources of productivity growth – technology, investment in human capital, research and development, and inter-industry shifts in the mix of national output. The late Robert Solow, the inventor of modern growth theory, put it best, framing productivity is as a “residual” proxy for technological progress after accounting for the physical contributions to output made by labour and capital.

Paul Krugman, in a celebrated 1994 Foreign Affairs article, brought the Solow growth-accounting framework to life in thinking about economic development. The vaunted performance of the fast-growing East Asian tigers, Krugman argued, reflected the “catch-up” growth achieved by building new capacity and bringing workers from low-productivity rural areas to higher-productivity cities. In a prescient warning of the Asian financial crisis, Krugman stressed that these economies ultimately failed to follow through on the inspirational genius embedded in the Solow productivity residual – call it a lack of imagination.

My last three visits to China have led me to a similar conclusion. The Chinese leadership is suffering from an increasingly worrisome imagination deficit. Their deeply entrenched countercyclical policy mindset is at odds with mounting deflationary risks, exacerbated by the lethal interplay between a rapidly aging population and serious productivity problems. At the same time, the government is stifling innovation through a barrage of regulations, attempting to draw inspiration from ideology. Without a more imaginative approach to economic stewardship, China could remain stuck, unable to muster the courage that its reformers drew on so successfully in the past.


*Stephen S. Roach, a former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, is a faculty member at Yale University and the author of the forthcoming Accidental Conflict: America, China, and the Clash of False Narratives (Yale University Press, November 2022). Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2024, published here with permission.

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28 Comments

Good piece. But took him until 2021 to realise all of this?

I am probably going to China in May on university-related business. Looking forward to visiting, despite my issues with the CCP. 

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Have fun, it sound like you will have a local guide, which is great. Just came back from an East Asia tour. Japan is much more foreign visitor friendly.  

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Did you visit China? If so, any key thoughts, suggestions, recommendations? (Please)

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Yes, 9 years after my last visit. First impression was the empty International airport. Before arriving CN, I visited JP and TW during, their airports were packed with foreign visitors, especially JP. The CN airport was like a ghost town compared to them. The 2nd was how digital the daily life is. CN is pretty much a cashless society now and people rely on WeChat mini programs to live daily (you see why Elon Musk wants to transform X to a WeChat lol),  but you must provide Tencent with your ID and facial recognitions first. To me this one is a deal breaker for many tourists. The 3rd was the sheer number of unfinished apartment complexes, the property market is crashing, no doubt. The 4th was the wide adoption of EVs. CN is definitely leading in that space atm.

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Thanks. I have been watching a few videos on YouTube made by a German guy and one of his big observations was how quiet the streets of Shanghai are, because of the predominance of EVs. 
The WeChat ID - why do you think it’s a ‘deal breaker’ for many tourists? Discomfort with giving away ID and potential misuse of it? Genuine concern or not really?

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I feel uncomfortable to give Tencent my identiy information especially when CN customs and immigration services already collected it before I could enter the country.

Why do I think it is a deal breaker? I think if you are a tourist who is going to stay in the country for a week or two, you want something simple, such as cash and normal credit cards, rather than surrendering your identiy to a company.

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Is it possible to get by without WeChat? Or very very hard? I assume the latter from what you have said. I assume hotels and higher end restaurants take credit card?

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If you live in hotels which are open to foreigners (not all hotels do that), you can use your CCs. It will be quite inconvenient if don't have WeChat pay set up since many businesses don't prepare for cash transactions. Also have the global roamming on, especially if you have an Android device. 

 

 

 

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Thanks for your advice. It’s a little daunting, and a tad intimidating, but nevertheless I am looking forward to it. Will mostly be in Shanghai but will have a couple of nights in Beijing (hope to see the Great Wall)

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Have a good trip, and hopefully you will get a chance to see the Great Wall. You can also check out Forbidden City if time allows.

Please share your experience here once you are back, if you can : )

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Will do :)

Quite interested in a day trip to Suzhou

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If you can, engage people in conversation about local politics. While the CCP looks like a single, cohesive body when looked at from the top, the reality is that just below the top it's a thriving mass of political intrigue that rivals the US Senate and Congress.  

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Good article  - Hard to see any change while President Xi remains in charge - and when he is gone it will be a long way back and the world will have moved on 

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China's current prosperity is only due to them cloning the market economics of their neighbours. Done reluctantly, after the CCPs own previous initiatives resulted in mass starvation and poverty.

Doesn't seem like they're remotely capable of unique idea generation that ends well.

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Don't forget the once young population that dreamed of living like Americans. They were pivotal. China's slowing down because the central kingdom is running out of young people. Wait for Communist Vietnam to rise. 

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While the American Dream has certainly been a desirable aspiration for many developing nations, for China the extreme hardship felt for decades formed most of that motivation - just as a depression followed by a world war was a key driver for the Americans to form that American dream in the first instance.

China's depopulation is indeed going to be telling, however there's still a fairly large pool of younger rural Chinese that haven't been assimilated into the system. China's real problem is there's a limit you can achieve by becoming the world's source of cheap manufacturing, which has now reached saturation. Theyve engaged in a substantial amount of malinvestment with diminishing returns, with little chance of retaining the growth the CCP has used to legitimise themselves over the past few decades.

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"Doesn't seem like they're remotely capable of unique idea generation that ends well."

LOL.

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Quite a wordsmith, bit above my pay grade but my take on it is China is having trouble maintaining its huge previous growth rates. Huh, right on dude, many of the numbers are fake and/or manufactured.
Look at the mountains of bike rental companies that started up and kept taking govt and investors funding, all the while just scrapping the brand new bikes. The cities that have been built, only for the tower blocks to be unfinished and uninhabitable, now the electric vehicles (BYD) in their 1000s, registered and driven 37km from the factory to rot away. 
Currently the AUS Navy is practicing for their response to a Chinese invasion of Taiwan in 2026. I guess that’s when the Chinese house of cards is due to collapse properly…. and so, a good old invasion of a more successful but little neighbour comes about. 

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I had the 'privilege' of seeing communism in both its formats in the late 70s early 80s. The privilege being, was that I appreciated my own culture's freedoms very quickly.

One was very a heavy ''guns at the doorway'' type with the other more of a noisy chaotic survival kind of thing. Neither impressed. Coming home & reading more about both cultures fascinated me. Both were brutal & unforgiving & it didn't take much to figure out that the leaderships of both countries were bonkers. Communism was for the clueless. 

Ironically, both have since capitalised their labour forces & as we read above, both have decided that their autocratic ways are far better for the leadership class than having more open format lifestyles. As a result in these two countries, almost a quarter of all the people on Earth end up living very tough lives. If you add in all the smaller & medium sized dictatorships & it would be two out of three of the global population have their oppressed. 

The problem with autocracies of either extreme, is that only a very few end up with all the gold. Now, you might say that about the capitalists also, but at least we get the chance to vote them out every once in a while.

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Communism was for the clueless

As a philosophy, there's some obvious truths and merits.

In a practical sense though, almost always it comes about via revolution, and revolutions generally only take place in an environment of mass societal discontent, poverty, and decades of poor leadership. The new regime inherits a failed state, which lacks the resources and experience to forge a better future, and the nature of the overthrow mandates a heavy hand that only worsens over time.

Democracy isn't much better. We can "vote them out" as you say, but the overall conduct of the actual parliament doesn't alter much with the changing governments. It's a ruse to give the populace the illusion of a say, ensuring a greater chance of stability, whilst the actual power wielders go about their business. 

How many times has a population voted in a government that fundamentally alters a nations course for the net benefit and desires of it's voting populace? It's happened, but in exception.

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De Gaulle, Thatcher - didn't they fundamentally change their nations?  And many times nations elect leaders who are not supported by the most of the wealthy elite - eg Truman.

Soviet Russia started with revolution but lasted a long hile. It was effective from 1918 to about Sputnik - it grew its economy for decades, but when a system gets to a certain level of complexity it is impossible micro-control it in every detail.  Russia's failure was inability to match the west progress from the 1960s onwards - revolution long in the past and the gulags mainly closed.

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I said rare, not impossible. For the most part, Democracy doesn't usually address rather obvious existent problems in any meaningful way. Perhaps that's a function of needing to remain viable to the voting demographic who are mostly ok with how things are, and the political parties pushing for change are often too fringe to garnish enough support, or offer any palatable solution. In the case of NZ, we have the Greens, who probably highlight our issues better than any other party, but lack the broad support, or policy wherewithal to actually do anything substantive.

Like China, early Soviet Russia managed a certain level of improvement by implementing a command economy. Ditto the likes of Cuba.

Possibly not the increased complexity that was the undoing, more that there's a limit to innovation you can achieve with an authoritarian regime stifling idea generation, and capital limits imposed in the absence of a market economy.

Communism at best looks to provide equitable mediocrity. At worst, it has genocide, mass starvation, and people having to eat each other.

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So they'll attack Taiwan for the same reason Russia invaded Ukraine; to stay in power. 

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It's a show of strength to distract from actual weakness. Power obtained at gunpoint is very fragile.

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It's worth keeping an eye on per capita figures as China's population holds, or contracts.

ITC, robotics, advanced heavy machinery, automation, modern farming techniques, etc. have all contributed to needing fewer workers while still producing the same, or more. In many ways China is skipping about 30-40 years of sub-par production that the west had to go through as they clawed their way into what is 'now'.

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China is way ahead in the game, its kind of fascinating listening to western brain washed people however. Amazing how some people can be watching the same thing and end up with a totally different view. Aljazeera is practically unwatchable at the moment it is so pro Palestine.

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CCP fear and control freakery means no way back. It will not allow private sector the freedom to innovate as fears its position will be weakened 

Their growth miracle was indeed catch up and ageing pop everywhere means lower growth due to fewer workers and consumers plus more old folk spending less and costing more. Hence gov need more revenue and working pop resent it. 
Money is available from those who have done v well since 2010 but no gov is prepared to state this and implement it. Hence in elections and in between no tv or party wants to ask the question: what is needed and who will pay. It’s either tax or debt and now debt is not affordable the systems have big problem generating consumers spending

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One could easily write the same thing about most capitalist western countries.  Debt intensive malinvestment, fiscal stimulus and monetary policy aimed at the property and stock markets.  The only thing missing is being deflation prone because the authorities won't allow it.  Productivity issues that are misunderstood by most economists and politicians because the most unproductive sector - the investment/financial system - overrules all.

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