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July 2000
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
China Takes Another Step Toward Internationalism
The recent U.S. congressional vote on
Permanent Normal Trade Relations with China has naturally
drawn peoples attention to China. After all, this vote
was one step towards ratifying the particular agreement the
United States made with China as part of that nations
accession to the World Trade Organization (WTO). However,
the protests about the vote suggest that more explanations
are in order. This document discusses Chinas economic
liberalization and how it has spurred growth and opened China
to the West. The document also discusses how the ongoing,
important role of Chinas state-owned enterprises has
caused economic difficulty for China. I begin with a general
outline of China and its economy.
First, as Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
President Robert McTeer jokingly said in a Dallas Morning
News editorial two months ago, "China is really
big." Figure 1, which presents the populations of the
five largest nations in the world, offers clear evidence.
With more than one billion two hundred million people, China
is not only the most populous country in the world, but it
has 250 million more people than the second place country,
India.
China is not only large in population,
but also geographically. Figure 2 shows the five largest nations
in terms of geographic size. China is third. While it is not
nearly as large as the Russian Federation, it is not much
smaller than Canada, nor much bigger than the United States.
More significant is Chinas growing
economic importance. However, Chinas income per capita
is low. There are 148 nations in the world with incomes per
capita higher than China. Figure 3 shows some of them. Egypt,
Mexico and Paraguay all have incomes per capita greater than
Chinas, as does the United States.
But despite Chinas low income
per capita, its large population means China is the worlds
seventh largest economy, as Figure 4 shows. While Chinas
economy is markedly smaller than the sixth largest economy,
Italy, it is also significantly larger than the eighth largest
economy, Brazil.
While it may be interesting that China
is one of the worlds largest economies, what is particularly
noteworthy is the increasing importance of the Chinese
economy in the world. Figure 5 presents the cumulative growth
rate of Chinas gross domestic product, as well as cumulative
growth rates for other large economies, including the European
Union, United States, Brazil, Canada, India, and Japan. China
is the thick red line. The United States is the thick blue
line with red dots. Japans line is lavender. As can
be seen, Chinas gross domestic product—the red
line—has grown faster than any of the other twelve largest
economies in the world, even though the growth rate has slipped.
From an Asian perspective an important detail here is what
this figure tells us about Chinas rising economic importance
relative to Japan. Chinas economic convergence with
Japan may already be turning out to have political implications.
Some observers have noted that when President Clinton went
to Asia in 1998, he only went to China without visiting Japan.
Even so, as I shall discuss, Chinas growth masks efficiency
problems that cannot be ignored.
China Liberalizes, Some
The most important contributors
to Chinas takeoff , the takeoff that can be seen in
the last figure, are the market-oriented liberalizations that
began in 1979. At that time, collective farming was phased
out. And even though the state still owned all the land, each
farmer got to control his own plot. This new policy was intended
to motivate each farmer to grow more and it did. The government
also permitted farmers to sell their products on the open
market at a market price. The government did not open all
farm production to the market. The government did take a set
amount every year from each farmer and did pay a nonmarket
price. But farmers could sell everything beyond that. These
two steps—individual control of designated plots of
land, selling in an open market—yielded large increases
in farm output.
In 1984, similar market price reforms
were applied to the state-owned industrial sector. So-called
dual pricing systems—in which a certain quantity of
output was allotted to the government at a government-determined
price and the rest sold on the open market at market-determined
prices—began to be permitted in the industrial sector.
Meanwhile, labor moved out of agricultural work and into industrial
work, which was more productive. Nowadays, 95 percent of industrial
products are sold at market prices.
In the early 1990s, China launched a
new wave of foreign investment and foreign trade liberalization.
China liberalized foreign direct investment to attract firms
that would export. In fact, China remained relatively closed
to foreign investments designed to serve Chinese customers.
Turning to the issue of trade, in 1993
the government announced major import tariff reductions on
2,800 categories of products. Between 1992 and 1997, Chinese
average tariffs fell by about two-thirds. However, I should
point out that half of all imports were also subject to nontariff
barriers. Many industries were still heavily protected and
many imports are tightly controlled, regardless of tariff
levels. China was afraid to permit foreign competition with
its large state-owned enterprises, many of which were inefficient
then and many of which even now are losing money.
Over time privately owned entities have
begun to account for an increasing portion of Chinese production.
Figure 6 shows that the share of total Chinese industrial
output produced by state-owned enterprises—the red portion
of the figure—fell from 78 percent in 1978 to 28 percent
in 1998. Meanwhile, the portion of industrial output that
came from individually-owned companies—the blue portion—rose
from zero percent in the late 1970s and early 1980s to 17
percent in 1998. The share of total industrial output from
other types of private enterprises—the yellow portion—rose
from zero percent in the late 1970s to 23 percent year before
last.
The shift to production by private enterprises
is obviously an important phenomenon. There is much to suggest
that, despite Chinas rapid growth, the nations
large overhang of state-owned enterprises has kept it from
achieving efficiency gains that might otherwise have been
possible. Some estimates show that the bulk of output increases
in nonfarm output result from freeing labor from the farms
and that relatively little involves real efficiency gains
in industry. Meanwhile, as these reorganizations have occurred
over the last two decades, government revenues have declined
by two-thirds. The share of state -owned manufacturing firms
that are losing money has been growing steadily since the
1980s. Falling revenues led the government to increasingly
impose social service costs for workers onto the state-owned
enterprises that employed them, creating additional financial
stresses on these institutions.
I mentioned that an important part of
Chinas increase in output occurred because of a shift
of labor from agriculture to industry. Figure 7 shows two
examples of that shift. First, farmers left agricultural collectives
and began to work in community owned factories known as Township
and Village Enterprises, which are managed as market-oriented
enterprises. In 1978, these enterprises employed 7 percent
of rural Chinese. By 1984, they had expanded so much that
they employed 11 percent of rural Chinese. By 1996, they employed
28 percent. Now, however, these enterprises are starting to
cut jobs. In contrast, purely private sector operations, which
are not part of the Township and Village Enterprises, are
growing rapidly, taking up the slack. These are represented
by the turquoise line on the figure. While these private sector
operations may seem small on the figure, note that they employ
more than 40 million people.
An important engine of growth that is
dominated by private sector firms is Chinas export sector.
An important component of Chinas international trade
has been trade with the United States. Figure 8 shows U.S.-China
imports and exports over the last 15 years. Over this period,
total U.S.—China trade as a percentage of Chinese gross
domestic product has gone from 2.6 percent in 1985 to 10 percent
at the end of the 1990s. This same trade has gone from less
than 0.2 percent of U.S. GDP to more than 1 percent. So China
has not simply grown as an economy, but also has grown in
economic importance as a supplier of products to us, and as
a market. Note that U.S. imports from China have grown over
this period a great deal more than U.S. exports to China.
Chinas overall trade is much more balanced.
Last year, China was Texas 15th
largest export market out of 235 countries. About one billion
dollars in Texas products were sold to China. China was not
in the same league with Mexico. Last year $41.4 billion in
Texas products went to Mexico. Of the two pie charts in Figure
9 that characterize Texas exports, the chart on the left shows
the share of the $1 billion in last years exports to
China that went to various products. The pie chart on the
right shows the shares of total Texas exports accounted for
by the same products. Texas exports to China focus more
heavily on instruments and chemicals than our overall exports
do. Compared with China, Texas is rich in technical skills
and in physical capital. Those are important inputs, respectively,
for the production of instruments and chemicals, so it should
not be surprising that we export relatively large quantities
of these products to China. Moreover, our exports to China
are likely to accelerate.
Figure 10 offers one reason why Texas
exports to China are likely to accelerate. The products on
the pie chart of Texas exports to China were industrial products.
These two bars depicting average Chinese tariffs on industrial
products now and five years after WTO accession offer a reason
why. The United States, in contrast, does not lower tariffs.
The United States is already giving China the trade regime
liberality that a WTO country would get, but up to now we
have not guaranteed to the Chinese that they will get to keep
it. China will get to keep this trade regime liberality if
the Senate follows the House in voting for what are called
Permanent Normal Trade Relations with China—which is
our agreement for Chinese accession to the WTO—and if
China is permitted to join the WTO by the other members. Even
so, average Chinese tariffs on industrial products will be
more than double those of most developed countries. Chinas
accession to the WTO is not comparable to Mexicos joining
NAFTA. The WTO is not a free trade agreement.
China Loosens Much More Than Tariffs
Despite the large reductions in
tariffs, Chinas largest and most important openings
in our WTO accession agreement with them involve reductions
in nontariff barriers. Chinas accession to the WTO will
include phase-out of import licensing and import quotas. There
will be reductions in monopolization of import rights either
by the state itself or by importers designated by the state.
Offsets—under which foreign firms are only allowed to
set up operations in China if they agree to use a minimum
quantity of Chinese inputs, or transfer some minimum quantity
of technology to China, or export some minimum quantity from
China—will be phased out. Many other nontariff barriers
will also fade away. I should note also that there is a full
schedule of service sector commitments that open China to
import/export trading companies, retailing and wholesaling,
insurance, accountancy, legal and other professional services,
and of course banking. Again, these openings are large and
important.
I am going to outline Chinas opening
of its banking system under the WTO. To prepare for that explanation,
a reiteration of the current problems of Chinas banking
system deserves attention. Figure 11 depicts the growing losses
of state-owned enterprises with independent accounting systems.
These enterprises are very important debtors of Chinas
banking system. This is a major reason why, right now, the
Chinese banking system is in something it is hard not to label
a crisis. Chinese capital controls mean that the capital outflows
we saw in Asia three years ago will not be happening in China.
We will not see the sort of sudden financial stop we saw in
Russia in 1998.
However, last year the central bank
labeled 20 percent of bank loans as nonperforming. Some economists
have estimated nonperforming loans at closer to 50 percent
of total loans. Government bailouts are going on right now,
but banks have in the past simply been rolling over the dead
loans. As this has occurred, lending for new projects has
dried up and even now bankers are gun shy about further lending.
Chinese Market Opens to Foreign Banks
Over Five-Year Period
The agreement under which Chinas
accession to the World Trade Organization takes place will
move banking in the right direction in China after this experience.
Right now, foreign institutions have strict limitations on
where and to whom and in what currency they can carry on banking
operations. They cannot deal with domestic Chinese businesses.
They cannot lend to Chinese individuals. To the extent that
foreign banks can deal at all in Chinese currency, it must
be with foreign firms and in certain locations. Chinas
accession to the WTO will change all of that over a five-year
period. After five years, a U.S. bank will be able to lend
Chinese currency to Chinese businesses and individuals anywhere
in China. Right now foreign firms cannot bring their expertise
at separating bad borrowers from good ones to the real Chinese
markets. Five years after accession they can. That is a very
large opening.
A Few Things We Learned in China
In late May my research department
colleague Dong Fu and I went to China for a series of presentations
to groups of bankers and certified public accounts in Tianjin—the
fourth largest city in China—and for a presentation
to scholars at the Unirule Institute in Beijing. Five particularly
striking economic issues turned up in conversations we had
with government officials, scholars, bankers and CPAs. First,
we were impressed by the very strong support we heard for
trade liberalization. Dong Fu and I were surprised to be invited
to a meeting with the mayor of Tianjin, who is also a member
of the Communist Partys ruling body, the Central Committee.
We were even more surprised to see that the meeting was televised
and that it was featured on the front page of Tianjin newspapers.
This was nothing personal. The point was that persons from
the United States Federal Reserve were there to discuss and
support trade liberalization in general and the World Trade
Organization in particular.
Second, because Chinas growth
has lately slowed and because we have already seen several
years of absolute deflation there, one sometimes hears conjectures
in the United States that the Chinese currency may devalue
to create a quicker price adjustment, at least from an international
perspective. We met with officials at Chinas State Administration
of Foreign Exchange in Beijing to discuss the possibility
of loosening Chinas exchange rate with the dollar. They
were adamant that this would not happen. Chinas closed
capital account means that a speculative attack is not in
the cards and, even if it were possible, Chinas extremely
large foreign currency reserves would discourage potential
speculators.
Third, particularly because of Chinas
financial problems we were curious about any opening of Chinas
capital account so that foreign capital inflows that are not
permitted now might occur. At the central bank of China, younger
officials supported capital account liberalization but said
that the older officials, who were the ones in power, continued
to oppose it. The issue of capital account liberalization
has been a topic of concern in any case in China. It is widely
felt that Chinas closed capital account contributed
significantly to Chinas avoidance of the problems so
many other Asian countries faced during the late 1990s. On
the other hand, in a country where banking problems have soaked
up a good deal of credit in the last few years, and where
corporate governance has not seen much expression through
the financial sector, younger policy makers would like to
see it. So-called policy loans, in which loans are given to
companies—usually state-owned enterprises, as a part
of the policy to support certain industries or sectors, rather
than because they are really creditworthy in any market economy
sense—are still on the books of banks that were intended
to behave like private commercial banks.
Fourth, we were struck by the interest
in financial market liberalizations—what happens during
them and what the downsides may be—in China. There was
much discussion over the relative virtues of universal banking
versus the more traditional type. It should be noted that
Chinas government-owned banks were for a while permitted
to act as universal banks. As the banking system began to
take turns for the worse, however, the government chose the
route that is perhaps easier to regulate and made banks return
to their more traditional roles. Also there were a lot of
questions about how one resolves a financial crisis.
Finally and very striking, while income
distribution in China does not come close to taking on the
extremes we see in Brazil or Mexico, Chinese income distribution
is more uneven than in most countries where it is
measured, including the United States. This kind of an income
distribution in China means that people who have any money
have a lot of it.
As incomes have gone up there has arisen
amongst people with more money a consumer culture whose manifestations
are increasingly striking. Thus, while most people in China
ride bicycles, there was talk and interest in this years
Beijing auto show at a level we would not see in the United
States.
Conclusion
In conclusion it should be noted
that China has carried out a different type of liberalization
than some of the former Soviet-bloc countries, certainly different
than what we now refer to as the Russian Federation. China
began its real liberalization 20 years ago. Russia has only
been at liberalization for 10 years. China went slowly and,
in some ways, more smoothly, despite Tian-an-men Square.
Even so, the slowness of Chinas
transition has been costly as can be seen by Chinas
large banking difficulties. It is hard to estimate other costs
that are imbedded in the persistence of Chinas state-owned
enterprises in employing large portions of Chinas labor
force, although these enterprises do employ a far smaller
share of workers than 10 years ago, or 20.
Nevertheless, China is opening. First
China opened to markets within its own country. Since the
1980s, China has been internationalizing. With the World Trade
Organization, this will continue. Despite the difficulty of
Chinas transition, it is hard not to be optimistic for
further growth.
—William C. Gruben
| About In Depth
This article is based on
a presentation by William C. Gruben, vice president
and senior economist, Research Department, Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
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