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China's Aversion to Big Bang Stimulus Tested by Trump Tariffs

Published 10/30/2018, 05:05 AM
Updated 10/30/2018, 05:31 AM
© Bloomberg. An employee pushes a shopping basket while fulfilling an electronic order in a Wal-Mart Stores Inc. mini-warehouse for the company's one-hour delivery service in Shanghai, China, on Friday, Nov. 24, 2017. Wal-Mart has developed a big online grocery delivery business in China, capable of transporting fresh produce from its shelves to homes within an hour. Photographer: Qilai Shen/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- China’s attempt to break free from the debt-financed stimulus of the past is being stress tested by Donald Trump.

As the White House threatens tariffs on everything the U.S. imports from China, policy makers in Beijing are cushioning the economic blow with tax cuts, regulatory relief and investment incentives, rather than the kind of spending and monetary binge seen in 2008 and 2015.

While big bang support can’t be discounted should growth and employment really take a hit, economists for now expect China’s composure to hold, meaning more targeted tax cuts rather than breakneck spending.

Impact of Tariffs on China’s Growth

“In the past they have been throwing big money via the state owned enterprises at big infrastructure projects and now it is more about giving money to the people and hoping they will spend it,” said Joachim Fels, global economic adviser at Pacific Investment Management Co. “We think there will be more fiscal easing over and above what has already been announced.”

China’s leaders from Xi Jinping down are politically committed to avoiding a ‘flood’ of stimulus, and a multi-year campaign to curb the rate of debt expansion appears paused, not scrapped. Xi’s right-hand man on the economy, Liu He, has long advocated a shift away from credit-fueled growth at all costs and senior officials continue to warn of the dangers of excess debt, even as they seek to channel more money to cash-strapped private businesses.

Underscoring the need for support, economists downgraded their forecasts for gross domestic product growth in the final three months of 2018 and the first quarter of 2019, according to a Bloomberg survey of 65 analysts published Tuesday.

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The key question for the economy in the coming months is whether the boost from policies announced this year will kick in with enough force to outweigh the drag from higher duties and the fading effect of a pre-tariff export-rush.The success or failure of China’s attempts to stabilize its economy matters much more for the rest of the world than it used to, as the nation is “a more balanced contributor to global growth” according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch (NYSE:BAC) economists Ethan Harris and Aditya Bhave.

The IMF now calculates that China contributes about a third of the global expansion.

China’s targeted stimulus approach is primarily geared to stoking domestic demand, for instance a tax cut on the purchase of cars, as Bloomberg News reported Monday. While that move may dovetail with others aimed at reducing the cost of consumption, like tariff reductions, Chinese households in the biggest cities still face soaring rents and rising outlays for food, education and healthcare.

But even with the domestic economy pressured, there are two major constraints to enacting more powerful stimulus -- debt and the weakening yuan.

Non-financial corporate debt is rising again as a percentage of gross domestic product following a year and a half of deleveraging from its mid-2016 record, according to data from the Bank for International Settlements.

Efforts to support infrastructure debt will add to local governments’ debt burdens. And with household leverage rising quickly, consumers are less able to borrow the nation out of trouble than before. That atmosphere contributes to a heightened risk awareness among small and medium-sized companies, who are struggling to get funding even if they want it.

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Meantime, the yuan dropped to its weakest level since May 2008 on Tuesday, close to the key level of 7 per dollar. The weak yuan would make any large-scale expansion of the money supply perilous for domestic purchasing power. Policymakers will be reticent to let it weaken significantly for fear of broadening the trade war into a new front: currencies.

Given such constraints, and the background goal of curbing credit expansion, the central bank has so far refrained from broad monetary easing. Instead, it has sought to reorganize the liquidity available so that it flows to the right places. Growth in outstanding credit, and the money supply, are still slowing.

That leaves fiscal policy one of the few available circuit breakers, and an expansion of the deficit in 2019 a likely option. China International Capital Corporation Ltd sees potential for cuts to the value-added tax rate in 2019 and even a cut to the corporate income tax rate -- where China still charges firms more than comparable peers. Economists Eva Yi and Hong Liang see the deficit expanding to the 3 percent of GDP from this year’s 2.6 percent target.

And unlike the deeply indebted corporate sector, China’s central government still has deep pockets to draw from.

"We expect the Chinese government to continue to roll out stimulus measures that match the weakness in the economy," the Bank of America economists wrote in a recent note. "This should help ensure a soft landing next year. However, the trade war still has a ways to go and it is much too early to judge the efficacy of the stimulus measures. Stay tuned."

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