Official data suggesting a quickening of China's already fast-paced economy has rekindled overheating concerns, prompting economists to ask: Will Beijing revert to more central planning or market-based policies next?
"Contrary to initial impressions, Chinese government statisticians have just reported a stunning re-acceleration of industrial output growth over the first two months of 2005," Morgan Stanley chief economist and managing director Stephen Roach said after the release of data this week.
China's industrial output rose 16.9 percent to 903 billion yuan (US$109 billion) in the first two months of the year, with much of the growth attributed to overseas demand for industrial exports.
No figures were given for February, when China enjoyed a week-long Lunar New Year holiday, although the two-month figure follows an 8.9 percent year-on-year increase in January.
Although the Chinese holiday distorts data, Roach said: "the numbers were a shocker."
"A Chinese economy that appeared to be on a path of measured deceleration over the course of 2004 has clearly re-accelerated," he said.
Further fuelling fears that the year-long central macroeconomic controls ordered by Beijing have not been effective, China's fixed asset investment, a strong indicator of how much the government is spending on infrastructure, remained in the fast lane.
It grew 24.5 percent to 422.2 billion yuan in the first two months of the year, a rate that was fractionally lower than the 25.8 percent increase in fixed asset investment for last year but well above the recently set target of 16 percent growth.
"At the current pace, we think investment is still expanding too rapidly, especially compared to GDP and consumption," Huang Yiping said in a note.
"Some policymakers were comfortable with 9.5 percent GDP growth last year, primarily because the average growth for the past 25 years was 9.2 percent. However, the problem lies in the structure of the economy," argued Huang.
Huang worries that the amount of fixed capital powering the Chinese economy likely rose to a 45 percent share of the country's GDP, a level widely acknowledged as developmentally unsustainable.
"If this trend continues, then the risk of a hard landing will rise further, despite the existing tightening measures," Huang said.
That China's leadership is worried about the unbalanced character of the world's seventh largest economy, was underscored by another centrally-planned decision this week to marginally increase home loan interest rates.
China's central bank raised the minimum rate for a mortgage loan of more than five years to 5.51 percent from 5.31 percent and urged commercial banks to increase down payments to 30 percent of a property's value instead of the current 20 percent.
"The property sector is really the bane of the government now, it has gone crazy in some big cities such as Shanghai," said Yi Xianrong, research fellow at the Institute of Bank and Finance of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
"The risk in property sector now determines the risk of the country's economy as a whole, and it determines the future development of the country's economy," said a worried Yi.
At the close of China's annual parliamentary session Monday, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (
"The top priority of the government is to further strengthen and improve macro-regulatory policy measures in order to sustain a stable and fairly rapid economic growth rate," Wen said.
When China embarked on its economic "reform and opening policy" in the late1970s, it decided to begin flirting with the ideas of 18th century free marketeer Adam Smith.
In combination with command economy policies, that relationship continues today, and, is one that China will have to resolve sooner rather than later if the economy is to fly straight, analysts said.
"China has an important strategic choice to make, and that is what type of policy strategy is going to be most effective in dealing with the growth management of today's Chinese economy," Roach said.
"It really asks the more basic question of `is China still a state-owned economy or is it an increasingly market-driven economy,'" Roach said.
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