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Source: Getty

In The Media
Carnegie China

The Debt Surge Will Not Ruin China

China will see a rise in banks’ nonperforming loans and increasingly frequent defaults in the bond and shadow banking markets. This process will be very messy but is unlikely to derail the economy.

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By Yukon Huang and Canyon Bosler
Published on Apr 8, 2014
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The Asia Program in Washington studies disruptive security, governance, and technological risks that threaten peace, growth, and opportunity in the Asia-Pacific region, including a focus on China, Japan, and the Korean peninsula.

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Source: Wall Street Journal

China watchers are debating whether China's economic slowdown has finally hit bottom or its financial system is headed for a crash. Those who foresee an imminent crisis point to the alarming speed of booming credit and rising debt as a share of GDP. That case, however, is hardly airtight.

A more likely scenario is that China's economy will continue to hemorrhage slowly over the next few years but will be propped up by periodic mini-stimulus injections. If Beijing deals with its vulnerabilities effectively, and that is still a big if, the end game should not be a crisis but a more risk-conscious financial system and sustainable annual growth of 7% to the end of this decade.

The doomsday scenario is concerned with the total debt of Chinese households, firms and the government. This has grown sharply since 2008 to around 210% of GDP in 2013. The rate of increase is much higher than the 40-50 percentage point booms that occurred in the U.S. and United Kingdom before the global financial crisis, Korea before the Asian financial crisis, or Japan before its lost decade.

The more pessimistic analysts also expect China's debt to GDP ratio to continue rising, driving the interest burden of the debt to around 20% of GDP in 2017 from its current 12%. They believe that while the day of reckoning may not be tomorrow, it will likely arrive in a few years.

More optimistic observers point out that China's debt of around 210% of GDP is not abnormally high. Its ratio is close to that of regional peers Taiwan, Korea, Malaysia and Thailand and much lower than advanced economies, whose debt has averaged over 300% of GDP in recent years. But while the level of debt may not be a problem, the speed and extent of the rise are seen to create vulnerabilities.

Even if that's correct, China differs from its predecessors. Its initial rise in debt was the result of a deliberate state-driven stimulus program in response to the global financial crisis, which successfully prevented a sharp downturn.

In other crisis countries, a credit surge was due to the culmination of a long-term deterioration in financial indicators. This was brought on by excessive external borrowings, rising current account deficits and overvalued exchange rates or excessively leveraged housing markets exacerbated by chronic fiscal deficits.

China's rise in debt after the stimulus was fed by a construction boom which many see as a property bubble. A more likely explanation for the sharp rise in housing prices is that the market is trying to establish appropriate values for assets previously hidden in a socialist system.

Until housing was privatized a decade ago, there had been no property market. In this view, credit expansion can be seen as financial deepening rather than creating a serious debt problem.

Credit booms are also not inherently problematic. While almost all financial crises are preceded by credit booms, a recent IMF report shows that only a third of credit booms result in a financial crisis. On average, countries that had credit booms between 1970 and 2010 saw 50% more growth in per capita incomes than countries that did not have credit booms.

Moreover, China bears need not be so pessimistic about whether the economy can wean itself off credit. Structural shifts in the type of investment that is valued (growth-enhancing projects rather than buying up land), improving business conditions (particularly rising global demand), and more stable property prices give reason to believe that credit buildup will level off.

Pessimists can also rest assured that aside from the surge in debt, China has few of the common risk factors for financial crises. Its current account surplus is 2% of GDP, external debt only 10% of GDP, foreign exchange reserves at 40% of GDP, and a fairly valued if not undervalued currency.

Similarly, with below-normal loan-to-deposit ratios of 70% and minimal dependence on flighty wholesale funding, China's banks are highly liquid. They are not particularly vulnerable to a U.S.-style freeze of the interbank lending market.

The economy also continues to be buffered by the highest national savings rate of any major economy. And even after accounting for the recent surge in local government liabilities, the government has a relatively healthy government balance.

Rather than a financial crisis we should expect a slow hemorrhaging of financial resources with a rise in banks' nonperforming loans. Increasingly frequent defaults in the bond and shadow banking markets are also to come. This process will be very messy but is unlikely to derail the economy.

The real question is whether the government will be able to implement the productivity-enhancing reforms enshrined in the Third Plenum package to stem the hemorrhaging or if it will allow the financial system and economy to slowly bleed out.

This article originally appeared in the Wall Street Journal.

About the Authors

Yukon Huang

Senior Fellow, Asia Program

Huang is a senior fellow in the Carnegie Asia Program where his research focuses on China’s economy and its regional and global impact.

Canyon Bosler

Former Junior Fellow, Asia Program

Authors

Yukon Huang
Senior Fellow, Asia Program
Yukon Huang
Canyon Bosler
Former Junior Fellow, Asia Program
EconomyEast AsiaChina

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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