China could rebound in a big way, says Roach

Updated: 2013-03-18 10:55

By Michael Barris in New York (China Daily)

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China could rebound in a big way, says Roach

China's economy "hit bottom" by late September, but a rebound by the end of this year isn't out of the question, economist Stephen Roach says.

The former nonexecutive chairman of Morgan Stanley in Asia also said he expects China to maintain an annual economic growth rate of about 8 percent - half a percentage point above the 2013 target set by Wen Jiabao in his final speech as Chinese premier last week.

"The economy seems to have hit bottom in the third quarter (of 2012) and I expect progressive strengthening over the course of the year - especially if the external climate starts to improve on the heels of a gradual pickup in global growth," Roach told China Daily.

The world's second-biggest economy expanded 7.4 percent between July 1 and Sept 30, the seventh straight quarter in which the pace of growth was slower than the preceding three months, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. In the fourth quarter, Chinese GDP growth accelerated to 7.9 percent, slightly beating expectations and beginning what some observers see as a return to the high rates of past years.

Over the next five years, GDP growth in China should slow "toward 7 percent to 8 percent", as the nation transitions to a more services- and consumer-oriented economy, said Roach, a trained economist who left Morgan Stanley in February to take a position as a senior fellow at Yale University.

"A better-balanced Chinese economy," Roach said, "will be able to sustain slower underlying growth in trend GDP - especially if it draws support from labor-intensive services and thereby delivers more jobs per unit of GDP."

Whether China would be better off by engineering slower GDP growth was heavily debated during the just-concluded annual session of the National People's Congress in Beijing. A GDP-rate slowdown is a sensitive topic in the country, which equates growth with success, as defined by the ability to compete with mature economies of countries including the United States.

For all of last year, China's GDP growth was 7.8 percent - the slowest annual pace since 1999. In 2011, the rate was 9.3 percent. In his final work report to the NPC, presented last Tuesday, Wen proposed setting this year's GDP growth target at 7.5 percent.

According to Roach, China has experienced a "soft landing" despite his fears that the country was headed for a severe economic shock. In a January essay on the Project Syndicate website, the former Hong Kong-based executive urged Chinese leaders to move swiftly to accelerate their nation's transition to a more consumer-driven economy, to avoid a "hard landing".

Economists generally define a "hard landing" as a severe slowdown in growth that could push a country into economic recession, often as the undesired result of a government's efforts to curtail inflation by tightening the money supply. A "soft landing" describes a rate of GDP growth that's fast enough to avoid recession but slow enough to prevent damagingly high inflation.

"The debate is over: China has now set its strategy on the shift to a consumer-led growth model," Roach said in an e-mail. The challenge "now goes from strategy to implementation," he said, calling consumer-led growth "the only antidote" to Wen's concerns. The now-former premier lamented China's reliance on an "unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable economy".

"It will be up to the new leadership to implement the reforms required to pull it off," Roach said.

To maintain "stable economic-growth performance" for several years, China's incoming leaders, he said, need to lay out plans for "development of the services sector, funding the social safety net, liberalizing an antiquated residential permit system, reforming State-owned enterprises, and ending financial repression on households by lifting artificially low interest rates on savings".

Roach also said he hoped the new government would take aim at China's "endemic corruption problem", particularly in municipalities and provinces, guided by Wang Qishan, the new secretary of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection. Implementing tough new disclosure requirements for asset holdings of senior officials "would be an important step in that direction", Roach said.

Chen Jia in Beijing contributed to this story.

michaelbarris@chinadailyusa.com

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