Whenever China’s economy has swooned in recent downturns, its currency never buckled. It held steady, or strengthened, even as China’s neighbors or trading partners scrambled to cut the value of their own currencies to deal with the fallout.
With the Chinese yuan now taking its biggest plunge in decades, the worry is that the country’s already slowing economy is even worse off than reported and that the government is panicking. On Thursday, China allowed the yuan to weaken significantly for a third consecutive day.
The situation is shaking the aura of supremacy surrounding Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) and the Chinese Communist Party, which has portrayed a sense of ultimate authority, but the Chinese government’s response to the country’s financial woes is creating concerns about its ability to manage a slowdown.
Illustration: Yusha
“People are used to growth and rising living standards,” said Jonathan Fenby, an author and cofounder of the research firm Trusted Sources.
“But now they are in a ‘real’ world and the leadership has to convince them both that slower growth is in their long-term interests and that it is in control,” he said.
By the official measures, the economy is growing at 7 percent, right in line with government targets. It is a steady pace that the leadership has indicated can support decent job growth and put more money into consumers’ pockets.
However, a look below the surface shows a different, more worrisome picture. Core parts of the economy, like construction, are weaker than ever as the real-estate industry struggles. Consumer spending, which was supposed to pick up the slack, is not that strong. And financial services, a major driver of economic growth when the stock market was booming, are slipping.
The data coming out of China, too, is somewhat suspect. Economists now wonder whether, despite official figures showing growth, some provinces and regions could be dealing with outright recessions.
“To be honest, no one has a clue where the economy is and I don’t think that it’s properly measured,” Aberdeen Asset Management senior investment manager Viktor Szabo said.
“Definitely there is a slowdown,” he said.
“You can have an argument about what level it is, but it’s not 7 percent,” he said, referring to the rate of growth.
The government’s aggressive action on the currency has brought the economy into sharp focus.
The currency’s official rate, at 6.4 yuan per US dollar, is down 4.4 percent over the last three days. On a typical day, the yuan rises or falls just a small fraction of a percentage point.
While the government said the decision was intended to make the currency more market-oriented, the devaluation was also largely a gift to exporters. In relative terms, it makes China’s shipments of clothing or electronics to consumers in the US or Europe more affordable.
“I don’t see this mini-devaluation as some kind of outrageous act,” UBS economic adviser and Oxford University’s China center associate George Magnus said.
“But it is part of an array of other economic and financial stimulus measures designed to shore up the flagging growth rate,” he said.
The government has taken the usual steps by cutting interest rates and freeing up more money for banks to lend, but the leadership has also turned to more unconventional means in recent months to try to cushion the blow as the economy’s once-runaway expansion sinks back to earth.
It relaxed a rule that banned investment companies tied to local governments from piling on debt. When the stock market slumped, it aggressively moved to halt the slide, by encouraging borrowing to buy stock and pouring money into the system. It has also pledged tens of billions of dollars in support to state-controlled policy banks for loans to favored projects.
China’s plan has been to wean itself off a debt-driven growth model that has led to wasteful, government-led investment. Instead, policymakers want consumers to become the main engine for the economy, but that might take time.
They had hoped to maintain growth by keeping credit flowing to favored projects, a nationwide program that amounts to trillions of yuan worth of investment in new infrastructure. The money is going to redevelop shantytowns and to build wastewater treatment facilities, as well as expand road and rail networks.
In the city of Liupanshui in Guizhou, one of China’s least affluent provinces, the local government is building its first subway line. Officials hope to bring in private investment to help finance the project, a 49km line expected to cost 10 billion yuan (US$1.6 billion).
However, such efforts have not been enough.
While infrastructure investment is rising, it has failed to offset the nationwide pullback in spending on new factories and apartment block towers. Last month, overall investment in fixed assets rose 11.2 percent, the slowest increase in 15 years.
The troubles can be seen in mid-tier cities like Zhanjiang, on the southern coast, which is home to the navy fleet that patrols the South China Sea. While property prices in major metropolises like Shenzhen or Beijing have rebounded, those are exceptions. Prices of new homes in Zhanjiang fell 9.8 percent in June from a year earlier, the most recent data available.
China’s builders just are not building as much. For years, double-digit growth was the norm in construction materials, as cities across the country went on a building spree. That situation has reversed sharply and output of many crucial materials has been declining this year.
Cement output fell 5 percent by volume last month, while plate glass production declined 13.5 percent. Steel output fell 1.8 percent last month, the most on record. Exports of steel soared as mills, many of them operating at a loss and unable to find buyers at home, shipped their excess stock overseas.
Consumers are not yet able to shoulder the burden of driving the economy. While incomes are still rising, the job market has started to show signs of stress. Vacancies are declining across the market as companies reduce hiring in response to slowing business growth.
The stock market slump has also taken a toll, with the main Shanghai index down about a quarter from its peak two months ago. Ordinary investors have poured money into the markets over the last year and many are now sitting on losses.
The overall result is that consumers are spending less. Retail sales grew 10.5 percent last month from a year earlier, near the slowest pace in a decade. Share prices of big multinationals that sell heavily into the China market, like LVMH, the spirits and luxury goods retailer, or Yum Brands, which operates the KFC and Pizza Hut fast food chains, have suffered since the yuan’s devaluation.
Even homegrown e-commerce companies, held up by China’s leaders as builders of a new economy, have not escaped the rout. Shares in Alibaba, in New York, and Tencent traded in Hong Kong, have both declined over the last two days.
The stock market slump is a double blow. In the first half of the year, the flurry of new share sales, strong brokerage business and other market-related activities helped mask some underlying issues.
Without that boost, China’s GDP would have risen notably less than the 7 percent reported rate. Instead, it would have been about 6.2 percent in the second quarter and 6.5 percent in the first, economists at Standard Chartered estimated in a report last month.
As the government pumps money into the market and the broader economy, it might help, along with moves like the devaluation. It is just not clear how solid the economy will actually be.
“It’s all about the quality of growth,” University of California China academic Victor Shih said.
“If they want to, they can always achieve the right rate of growth,” he said.
The Chinese government, he added, just needs to find a group of people and “tell them to go dig a ditch.”
Additional reporting by Alexandra Stevenson
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