Why China Clings to State Capitalism

Discussion in 'Economics' started by Tom B, Jan 12, 2019.

  1. Tom B

    Tom B

    Why China Clings to State Capitalism
    By Robert J. Samuelson

    WASHINGTON -- American officials traveled to China this week in an effort to end the bitter trade war between the two countries. The main obstacle to a settlement is natural rivalry: The United States is trying to protect its position as the most important superpower; and China is serving notice that it covets that status for itself.

    What further complicates matters is a clash of economic systems. China practices state capitalism; the government owns many large firms and decides which industries will receive subsidies, protected markets and favorable loans. In the United States, private markets and firms mostly determine which companies grow or shrink.

    The result is a stalemate. Many Chinese policies and practices (rules that coerce the transfer of new technologies or business plans to Chinese businesses, or that discriminate against foreign companies) make perfect sense in the context of state capitalism. But to Americans and other private investors, they violate the norms of open competition and fairness.

    This makes negotiations exceedingly difficult. For China to abandon its policies would mean, in effect, scrapping its whole economic model. Politically, this would be hard to swallow. Similarly, for the United States to condone China's state capitalism would legitimize a system that puts U.S., foreign and private investors at a permanent disadvantage.

    The contradictions are inescapable. If an agreement is possible, it may skirt the central differences between the two countries and concentrate on limited Chinese pledges to buy more U.S. imports.

    Interestingly, the conflict is of recent origin. In a new book -- "The State Strikes Back: The End of Economic Reform in China?" -- economist Nicholas Lardy of the Peterson Institute for International Economics argues that, until a few years ago, China seemed to be moving gradually toward a system of private enterprise.

    In 1978, when Deng Xiaoping launched China's present economic reform, state-owned firms dominated the economy. Now, according to Lardy's estimates, private firms account for roughly 70 percent of the country's output (gross domestic product).

    The reversal came after Xi Jinping assumed leadership of the Communist Party in 2012 and, later, the presidency. He changed course, favoring state-owned firms, as Lardy shows by citing loans to businesses.

    In 2013, 57 percent of loans went to private firms and 35 percent to state-controlled firms. By 2016, there had been a stunning reversal; state firms received 83 percent of loans, compared with 11 percent for private firms. Much of this lending came from state-owned banks.

    This relates to a larger issue: the ferocious debate, mostly among economists, over China's future economic growth rate. In the decade leading up to the 2007-09 Great Recession, GDP growth averaged 10 percent annually. Since then, it has dropped to a 6 percent to 7 percent range, and some economists predict it will ultimately fall to a 2 percent to 4 percent range.

    Many theories have been advanced to explain this shift. After years of fast growth, it's said, China has exploited most existing technologies. It will now act more like a "normal" economy. Or: China has too much debt, limiting expansion. Or: China's population is rapidly aging, hampering labor force growth.

    Lardy dissents. He attributes the slowdown mainly to two factors: a declining trade surplus and the misguided decision to favor state-owned firms, which he regards as monstrously inefficient. He reports that the profitability of private-sector firms is more than double that of state-controlled companies.

    Writes Lardy:

    "The real [explanation] of the underperformance of state-firms vis-a-vis their private counterparts [is] insufficient profit-maximizing behavior, including corruption, on the part of the senior management of state firms and a large misallocation of capital [investment funds] by Chinese financial institutions, especially banks."

    The irony is inescapable. If Lardy is right -- and his conclusion will likely be challenged -- the decision to favor state capitalism will weaken China's future economic growth. But growth may not be the main reason that Xi has acted as he has.

    Even Lardy concedes that economic reform "must force into bankruptcy more long-lived zombie firms, mostly state-owned, that now survive by borrowing ever increasing amounts from state-owned banks."

    It is a specter that cannot please Xi, who may fear that "social unrest, unemployment, [and] financial instability" will weaken the Communist Party's grip on power, as Lardy notes. The main motive for protecting state firms may be political, more than economic. And that's why it may be so hard to change.

    (c) 2019, The Washington Post Writers Group

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...cfd62dbb0a8_story.html?utm_term=.bce39074d04b
     
    Stockolio likes this.
  2. Is that real... Wow.
     
  3. It is a loan fiesta there, anybody gets a " loan ". They give money out to keep there population happy, they have been on helicopter money for years through long term " loans ". That is why with deglobalisation in effect, Automation and 3D Printing better then ever, Vietnam opening up to international companies, Chinese see lower quality of life ahead... Even people from China are increasingly furious with extreme nationalism approach and censoring of everything, but they feel helpless to the dictator in power. Dictator Xi Kingpin makes Germany Alt right look tolerant to others

    They have really increased anti North America propaganda, Government Dictators in China are forcing people to boycott Canada Goose, a jacket maker! If you have an Iphone there, government will shame you, there is a serious government sponsored Nationalism wave... It seems US-China war is inevitable, you see Russia wanted a seat at the table, they made there point and they got it. China wants the head seat at the table with the dictator in power, they are pushing anti-white propaganda, I feel many Chinese want to flee there country cause most do not see eye to eye on the hate for others and direction of country in general
     
  4. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Hate China much.

    Apple sells millions of IPhones each year over there to their people.
     
  5. I'm sorry the word State and the word capitalism do not go together... bottom line is there intervention is a lot higher than ours the government is picking winners and losers even more than our government is
     
    MeAgainstTheWorld likes this.
  6. The 1st Canada Goose store just opened in China with great fanfare, though the only report that I can find in western media is this

     
  7. https://www.bbc.com/news/46534291
    https://www.narcity.com/news/people...ir-stock-is-officially-crashing-because-of-it
    https://globalnews.ca/news/4803647/canada-goose-store-china-success/

    Come on dude, I am from Vancouver aka Hongcouver... I have quite a few Chinese friends, and know a ton of them, considering the majority of Population here is Oriental. There is legit state owned government media hate on Canada Goose, cause it is Canadian, and everything Canadian is getting bashed there now, I am not making this up, this is what is actually going on
     
    athlonmank8 likes this.
  8. Are Chinese people mindless sheep's like in North Korea who obey there dictator no matter what ? No, not even close, but by nature oriental people are very conformist and there government is pushing them towards totalitarianism... Canada Goose is extremely popular with the Canadian Asian community, and everyone else in General in Canada. Dictators in China are still pushing to boycott it, wont be long until there is re-education for people who do not support China first product... Dictator Kingpin has re-education camps there, surveillance camera's absolutely everywhere and just general fear of being kidnapped for talking wrong about Government officials
     
  9. The first two reports in your post were before the store opened and there was some speculation
    in the media as to why the store opening was delayed.

    The last link actually confirmed that the Canada Goose is selling well in China after it opened the store. There is some bashing going on there, but I don't think ordinary people care.
     
    SunTrader likes this.
  10. https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/china-ambassador-white-supremacy-1.4971884

    http://time.com/5498829/china-ambassador-accuses-canada-racism/

    Checkmate!
     
    #10     Jan 12, 2019