China’s Economy Is Slowing, a Worrying Sign for
the World
Economic output climbed 4 percent in the last quarter
of 2021, slowing from the previous quarter. Growth has faltered as home buyers
and consumers become cautious.
Keith
Bradsher
By Keith
Bradsher
Published
Jan. 16, 2022
Updated
Jan. 17, 2022
阅读简体中文版閱讀繁體中文版
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/16/business/economy/china-economy.html
BEIJING —
Construction and property sales have slumped. Small businesses have shut
because of rising costs and weak sales. Debt-laden local governments are
cutting the pay of civil servants.
China’s
economy slowed markedly in the final months of last year as government measures
to limit real estate speculation hurt other sectors as well. Lockdowns and
travel restrictions to contain the coronavirus also dented consumer spending.
Stringent regulations on everything from internet businesses to after-school
tutoring companies have set off a wave of layoffs.
China’s
National Bureau of Statistics said Monday that economic output from October
through December was only 4 percent higher than during the same period a year
earlier. That was a deceleration from the 4.9 percent growth in the third
quarter, July through September.
The world’s
demand for consumer electronics, furniture and other home comforts during the
pandemic has produced record-setting exports for China, preventing its growth
from stalling. Over all of last year, China’s economic output was 8.1 percent
higher than in 2020, the government said. But much of the growth was in the
first half of last year.
The
snapshot of China’s economy, the main locomotive of global growth in the last
few years, adds to expectations that the broader world economic outlook is
beginning to dim. Making matters worse, the Omicron variant of the coronavirus
is now starting to spread in China, leading to more restrictions around the
country and raising fears of renewed disruption of supply chains.
SUPPLY
CHAIN WOESHere’s how China’s coronavirus policy could disrupt the flow of
goods.
The slowing
economy poses a dilemma for China’s leaders. The measures they have imposed to
address income inequality and rein in companies are part of a long-term plan to
protect the economy and national security. But officials are wary of causing
short-term economic instability, particularly in a year of unusual political
importance.
Next month,
Beijing hosts the Winter Olympics, which will focus an international spotlight
on the country’s performance. In the fall, Xi Jinping, China’s leader, is
expected to claim a third five-year term at a Communist Party congress.
Mr. Xi has
sought to strike an optimistic note. “We have every confidence in the future of
China’s economy,” he said in a speech on Monday to a virtual session of the
World Economic Forum.
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But with
growth in his country slowing, demand slackening and debt still at near-record
levels, Mr. Xi could face some of the biggest economic challenges since Deng
Xiaoping began lifting the country out of its Maoist straitjacket four decades
ago.
“I’m afraid
that the operation and development of China’s economy in the next several years
may be relatively difficult,” Li Daokui, a prominent economist and Chinese
government adviser, said in a speech late last month. “Looking at the five
years as a whole, it may be the most difficult period since our reform and
opening up 40 years ago.”
China also
faces the problem of a rapidly aging population, which could create an even
greater burden on China’s economy and its labor force. The National Bureau of
Statistics said on Monday that China’s birthrate fell sharply last year and was
now barely higher than the death rate.
Private
Sector Struggles
As costs
for many raw materials have risen and the pandemic has prompted some consumers
to stay home, millions of private businesses have crumbled, most of them small
and family-owned.
That is a
big concern because private companies are the backbone of the Chinese economy,
accounting for three-fifths of output and four-fifths of urban employment.
Kang
Shiqing invested much of his savings nearly three years ago to open a women’s
clothing store in Nanping, a river town in Fujian Province in the southeast.
But when the pandemic hit a year later, the number of customers dropped
drastically and never recovered.
As in many
countries, there has been a broad shift in China toward online shopping, which
can undercut stores by using less labor and operating from inexpensive
warehouses. Mr. Kang was stuck paying high rent for his store despite the
pandemic. He finally closed it in June.
“We can
hardly survive,” he said.
Another
persistent difficulty for small businesses in China is the high cost of
borrowing, often at double-digit interest rates from private lenders.
Chinese
leaders are aware of the challenges private companies face. Premier Li Keqiang
has promised further cuts in taxes and fees to help the country’s many
struggling small businesses.
On Monday,
China’s central bank made a small move to reduce interest rates, which could
help reduce slightly the interest costs of the country’s heavily indebted real
estate developers. The central bank pushed down by about a tenth of a
percentage point its interest rate benchmarks for one-week and one-year
lending.
Construction
Stalls
The
building and fitting out of new homes has represented a quarter of China’s
economy. Heavy lending and widespread speculation have helped the country erect
the equivalent of 140 square feet of new housing for every urban resident in
the past two decades.
This
autumn, the sector faltered. The government wants to limit speculation and
deflate a bubble that had made new homes unaffordable for young families.
China
Evergrande Group is only the largest and most visible of a lengthening list of
real estate developers in China that have run into severe financial difficulty
lately. Kaisa Group, China Aoyuan Property Group and Fantasia are among other
developers that have struggled to make payments as bond investors become more
wary of lending money to China’s real estate sector.
As real
estate companies try to conserve cash, they are starting fewer construction
projects. And that has been a big problem for the economy. The price of steel
reinforcing bars for the concrete in apartment towers, for example, dropped by
a quarter in October and November before stabilizing at a much lower level in
December.
A regional
strategy. Documents obtained by The Times show that China is pursuing a
regional agreement with Pacific island nations that would expand Beijing’s role
in policing, maritime cooperation and cybersecurity, in an apparent attempt to
win friends and gain greater access to the strategically important island chains.
Discontent
among the population. The Chinese government’s censorship and surveillance,
which the pandemic has aggravated, are pushing a small but growing group of
Chinese to look for an exit. Younger Chinese in particular are embracing the
view that they might need to flee the country in the pursuit of a safer and
brighter future abroad.
A new trick
for internet censors. To control the country’s internet, China’s censors have
relied for years on practices like on deleting posts, suspending accounts and
blocking keywords. Now they have turned to displaying users’ locations on
social media, fueling pitched online battles that link Chinese citizens’
locations with their national loyalty.
An
uncertain harvest. Chinese officials are issuing warnings that, after heavy
rainfalls last autumn, a disappointing winter wheat harvest in June could drive
food prices — already high because of the war in Ukraine and bad weather in
Asia and the United States — further up, compounding hunger in the world’s
poorest countries.
The decline
in home prices in smaller cities has hurt the value of people’s assets, which
in turn made them less willing to spend. Even in Shanghai and Beijing,
apartment prices are no longer surging.
There have
been faint hints of renewed government support for the real estate sector in
recent weeks, but no sign of a return to lavish lending by state-controlled
banks.
The
financial distress of Evergrande “is a signal that money will be pushed from
real estate to the stock market,” said Hu Jinghui, an economist who is a former
chairman of the China Alliance of Real Estate Agencies, a national trade group.
“The policies can be loosened, but there can be no return to the past.”
Local
Governments Feel the Pinch
The
slowdown in the housing market has also hurt local governments, which rely on
land sales as a key source of revenue.
The
International Monetary Fund estimates that government land sales each year have
been raising money equal to 7 percent of the country’s annual economic output.
But in recent months, developers have curtailed land purchases.
Starved of
revenue, some local governments have halted hiring and cut bonuses and benefits
for civil servants, prompting widespread complaints on social media.
In
Hangzhou, the capital of Zhejiang Province, a civil servant’s complaint of a 25
percent cut in her pay spread quickly on the internet. The municipal government
did not respond to a fax requesting comment. In northern Heilongjiang Province,
the city of Hegang announced that it would not hire any more “low-level”
workers. City officials deleted the announcement from the government’s website
after it drew public attention.
Some
governments have also raised fees on businesses to try to make up for the
shortfall.
Bazhou, a
city in Hebei Province, collected 11 times as much money in fines on small businesses
from October through December as it did in the first nine months of last year.
Beijing criticized the city for undermining a national effort to reduce the
cost of doing business.
Pockets of
Strength in Exports
Strong
overseas demand for China’s exports, particularly consumer goods, spurred a
national wave of new factory investments, up 13.5 percent last year from 2020.
Some areas
of consumer spending have been fairly robust, notably the luxury sector, with
sports cars and jewelry selling well. Retail sales rebounded 12.5 percent last
year compared with pandemic-depressed levels in 2020. But retail sales fell in
December fell from November, as coronavirus restrictions kept some shoppers at
home.
Few
anticipate that the government will allow a severe economic downturn this year,
ahead of the Communist Party congress. Economists expect the government to
soften its restrictions on lending and step up government spending.
“The first
half of the year will be challenging,” said Zhu Ning, deputy dean of the
Shanghai Advanced Institute of Finance. “But then the second half will see a
rebound.”
Li You
contributed research.
Keith
Bradsher is the Shanghai bureau chief. He previously served as Hong Kong bureau
chief, Detroit bureau chief, Washington correspondent covering international
trade and then the U.S. economy, telecommunications reporter in New York and
airlines reporter. @KeithBradsher




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