By: John
Chan
Source: Global Research
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=32278
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) regime has signalled a return to
stimulus measures because of sharply decelerating growth and potential social
unrest. A CCP Politburo meeting last week called for stable growth to be the
top priority.
“The ongoing pace of economic growth is within expectations, but
the external environment remains grim and poses difficulties and challenges,”
the official Xinhua news agency reported the Politburo discussions as stating.
The Politburo reiterated the need for “prudent” monetary and
“proactive” fiscal policies. In other words, Beijing will try to stem a
six-quarter slowdown in the world’s second largest economy by boosting bank
credit and implementing further stimulus measures.
Underscoring the worsening economic situation, Premier Wen Jiabao
told a meeting of business leaders and academics in late July: “We must see
with a clear mind that there are difficulties and risks in the current economic
situation that can’t be underestimated.”
President Hu Jintao warned that rising unemployment could trigger social
unrest. He said China would try to diversify export markets and “expand and
stabilise” employment.
The country’s economic growth for the second quarter fell to an
annualised 7.6 percent, the slowest rate in three years. However, this official
figure is optimistic and the actual situation could be far worse (See: “Economic downturn
in China worse than official data”).
The deepening debt crisis in Europe and its broader international
impact has reduced demand for China’s exports, which remain the economy’s main
driving force. According to China Custom, in the first half of the year,
exports to the European Union were $163.06 billion—a decline by 0.8 percent
from the corresponding period last year. Exports to Germany declined for four
consecutive months, France for three consecutive months and Italy for 10
months.
These figures translated into weakening industrial output. On
August 1, the official purchasing managers index (PMI), released by the
National Statistics Bureau, dropped to 50.1, its lowest level in eight months.
It was just above the 50 mark, which indicates expansion.
Two days later came the publication of the official
non-manufacturing index, based on a survey of about 1,200 companies in 27
industries, including telecommunications, transportation and construction. It
slipped from 56.7 to 55.6 in July. The service sector makes up 43 percent of
China’s economy, compared to 90 percent in the US. The contracting trend indicated
that Beijing’s hopes of expanding the domestic market to make up for a slowing
manufacturing sector is yielding few results.
The Chinese central bank has cut interest rates twice since June
and reduced the reserve requirements for banks three times since November in a
bid to encourage lending. The state planning commission has sped up approval of
investment projects and boosted railway spending to counter the decelerating
growth.
The China Security Journal reported last week that local
bank branches were instructed to provide credit support to provincial level
government-owned entities in 100 better-off counties, to build roads, railways,
natural gas and clean energy projects. Some cities are also increasing stimulus
efforts, with Changsha last month announcing an 829 billion yuan ($US130
billion) investment plan.
Relaxing lending to local governments is part of Beijing’s
emphasis on “stable growth.” However, cheap credit will worsen the debt crisis
facing local governments that are still struggling with huge debts resulting
from the last stimulus package. Local government debt was estimated at 10.7
trillion yuan or $1.7 trillion in 2010, but analysts say this is an
underestimation.
In a report released on August 3, London-based Capital Economics
warned that new local government stimulus measures, from Nanjing and Jiangsu to
Changsha and Hunan, could already total 4 trillion yuan, including tax cuts,
consumption subsidies and infrastructure investment. The report warned that the
2008-09 stimulus program had “aggravated domestic imbalances in the economy,”
leaving investment’s share of gross domestic product close to 50 percent—“one
of the highest levels ever recorded for a major economy during peacetime.”
Far from resolving the “imbalance,” the push to stimulate growth
with further investment will exacerbate the contradiction. Expanding domestic
consumption would involve a significant increase in wages and living standards,
which is unacceptable to the corporate elite.
The labour market contracted noticeably in the second quarter,
particularly in the more economically developed eastern provinces. A Ministry
of Human Resources and Social Security survey found that the number of job
applicants in China’s eastern region increased by 132,000 in the second
quarter, compared with the first quarter, while job vacancies increased by just
5,000.
While Chinese authorities still insist there is an “over-supply”
of jobs, not workers, the survey revealed the opposite. Workers in the coastal
provinces continue to lose their jobs as the manufacturing sector is hit by
falling export orders.
In Zhejiang province, small and medium sized factories are being
forced to scale back their workforces. In the first half of the year, the
province’s exports increased by just 5.2 percent—compared to 22.3 percent in
the corresponding period last year. In Wenzhou alone, 140 firms have shut and
one fifth of industrial enterprises with annual revenues near $3 million yuan
have experienced losses.
Zhejiang Wenzhou Apparel Association vice chairman Cai Huantian
told the China Security Journal in late July that the business
environment was worse than during the 2008 financial crisis. “The number of
orders has fallen by around 30 percent from the same period last year, and the
average volume of a single order has declined by 70 percent,” he said.
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