The
really worrying financial crisis is happening in China, not Greece
China
looks like it is heading for its version of the 1929 stock market
crash
By Jeremy
Warner12:17AM BST 08 Jul 2015 /
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/china-business/11725236/The-really-worrying-financial-crisis-is-happening-in-China-not-Greece.html
While all Western
eyes remain firmly focused on Greece, a potentially much more
significant financial crisis is developing on the other side of
world. In some quarters, it’s already being called China’s 1929 –
the year of the most infamous stock market crash in history and the
start of the economic catastrophe of the Great Depression.
In any normal
summer, a 30pc fall in the Chinese stock market – a loss of value
roughly equivalent to the UK’s entire economic output last year –
after an ascent which had seen share prices more than double within
the space of a year would have been front page news across the globe.
The dramatic series
of government interventions to stem the panic – hitherto
unsuccessful, it should be added – would similarly have been up
there at the top of the news agenda. Yet the pantomime of the Greek
debt talks, together with the tragi-comedy of will they, won’t they
leave the euro, has relegated the story to little more than a
footnote - even though 940 companies, more than a third, have now
suspended trading on China’s two main indices.
The parallels with
1929 are, on the face of it, uncanny. After more than a decade of
frantic growth, extraordinary wealth creation and excess, both
economies – America in 1929 and China today – are at roughly
similar stages of economic development. Both these booms, moreover,
are in part explained by extremely rapid credit growth. Indeed,
China’s credit boom dwarfs that of even the “roaring Twenties”.
Borrowed money, or margin investing, played a major role in both
these outbreaks of speculative excess.
True, the Chinese
stock market bubble is only a one-year wonder, whereas the build-up
to the Wall Street Crash of 1929 was more sustained. Even so, the
comparison still holds. As noted by JK Galbraith in his classic
account, The Great Crash 1929, even as late as 1927 it was possible
to argue that American stocks represented fair value. It was only in
the final year that the “escape into make-believe” happened in
earnest, when the stock market rose by nearly 50pc. This applies to
the Shanghai Composite, too. Stripping out the lowly-rated banking
sector, valuations for just about everything else have rocketed,
making those that ruled on Wall Street in the run-up to October 24,
1929, look relatively modest. Nor do the similarities end there. As
in 1920s America, China’s stock market boom has ridden in tandem
with an equally speculative real estate bubble.
The macro-economic
backdrop is also surprisingly similar. Then, as now in China, rural
workers had emigrated to the cities in vast numbers in the hope of
finding a more prosperous life in fast-growing industrial sectors. In
1920s America, virtually all these sectors – from steel to
automobiles and the new technologies of radio and consumer durables –
grew like Topsy, inspiring households to invest in them and chase the
apparently bountiful profits they were generating. A similar
explosion in industrial activity has taken place in China, only more
so. China has packed more development into a few short decades than
any country in recorded history before, creating a worldwide glut in
industrial capacity that even global demand, let alone domestic
Chinese demand, is struggling to accommodate.
Already, there are
warning signs of a slowdown, similar to those that front-ran the 1929
crash – depressed commodity prices and a virtual hiatus in global
trade growth. The Chinese economy is like one of those cartoon
characters who manages to keep running long after leaving the edge of
the cliff, only belatedly to look down and plunge into the abyss.
Naturally, there are
many dissimilarities too, not least that China is still essentially a
planned and centrally-controlled economy which has so far managed to
defy the usual rules of economics. The consensus is that this time
will be no different, that even if the stock market does continue to
crash, the impact will be no worse than 2007-08, when the Shanghai
Composite fell by two-thirds. Yet after a massive fiscal and monetary
stimulus, the wider economy barely lost a beat. Have no fear, the
Chinese authorities have it all under control. Believe it if you
will.
I don’t buy it.
Indeed, I can see very little evidence for China’s technocratic
elite having things under control. The firebreaks that China put in
place over the weekend to mitigate the panic are, in practice, not
much different from those applied during the Great Crash of 1929,
only this time it’s public rather than private money that promises
to quell the fire. They failed spectacularly in 1929. This time
around, they’ve thrown the kitchen sink at the problem, but so far
it has produced only a mild, and wholly unconvincing, rebound. The
fire still smoulders, threatening to break out anew.
Besides, China
cannot forever, Greenspan-like, keep answering each successive bubble
by creating another. First it was gold, then housing, and when
cooling measures threatened an all-out bust in the property and
construction markets, the taps were turned on afresh, producing a
further flood of money into the stock market. The authorities were
happy to tolerate the bull market at first, hoping it might encourage
a switch from debt to equity financing, but there seems little chance
of that now. The stock market boom has only succeeded in adding to
the debt.
Whether any of this
turns into a calamitous economic meltdown obviously depends on the
rest of the response. Policymakers have learned a thing or two since
1929; we now know that the real damage in financial crises is done
not by the crash itself, but by a collapsing banking sector. Stock
markets are only a signal of credit contraction to come. Even so, I
doubt China has as much of a handle on its banks, and more
particularly its shadow banking sector, as it pretends.
One further thought
on these parallels. Now that the export-led model of economic of
growth seems to have reached its natural end, at least for China,
president Xi Jinping pins his hopes on internal consumer demand to
drive growth, and he’s vowed to continue with the free-market
reforms of predecessors to help achieve this. Unfortunately, it’s
proving a difficult transition. Part of the problem with free markets
is that by definition they cannot be controlled. Busts are as much
part of their DNA as the wealth-enhancing properties of their booms.
As China is about to discover, bad downturns come with the territory.
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