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China more focused on getting rich than it is in stoking US rivalry
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04/04/2021, 04:10:07




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Commentary: China more focused on getting rich than it is in stoking US rivalry

Chinese policymakers are less afraid of economic decoupling from the US than many assume, say Andrew Sheng and Xiao Geng.

FILE PHOTO: FILE PHOTO: People wear protective face masks, following an outbreak of the novel coron
FILE PHOTO: People wear protective face masks, following an outbreak of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), at Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China March 19, 2020. REUTERS/Aly Song - RC22NF9MD3D3/File Photo/File Photo

HONG KONG: The OECD is projecting an uneven K-shaped economic recovery from the pandemic in 2021. Richer countries with more extensive vaccine rollouts that can afford to reopen and reflate their economies will do so. Poorer economies will struggle to stay healthy and avoid debt crises.

But the mantra that “no one is safe until everyone is” highlights the need to spread health, wealth, and self-respect to all. An increasingly prosperous China can and should play a central role in this effort.

Whereas the World Bank estimates that the pandemic may drive up to 150 million additional people globally below the poverty line of US$1.90 per day, billionaires everywhere have become richer during the crisis.

A 2020 report by UBS and PwC indicated that the global number of billionaires had increased to 2,189, with their combined wealth rising to US$10.2 trillion, mainly owing to higher returns on technology stocks.

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CHINESE HOUSEHOLD WEALTH ON THE RISE

Meanwhile, Credit Suisse estimates that global household wealth stood at US$400 trillion in June 2020, a more than threefold increase from US$117.9 trillion at the end of 2000.

Chinese household wealth rose remarkably fast, from 3.2 per cent of the global total in 2000 to 17.7 per cent by mid-2020. Over the same period, the United States’ share dropped from 36.2 per cent to 29.4 per cent, and Europe’s from 29.3 per cent to 25.2 per cent, while India’s rose from 1.1 per cent to 3.5 per cent.

But the benefits of rising wealth have not been equally shared, as almost all countries’ Gini coefficient – which measures inequality – has worsened.

Yet, while the number of Chinese billionaires has risen sharply due to property and tech booms, the gap between Chinese and US median wealth levels is narrowing. In 2000, the median wealth per Chinese adult was US$2,193, or 4.8 per cent of the US level, according to Credit Suisse.

By mid-2019, it had risen 9.5 times, to US$20,942, or 31.8 per cent of the American median of US$65,904.

FILE PHOTO: Residential buildings under construction are seen near the central business district (C
FILE PHOTO: Residential buildings under construction and a power station are seen near the central business district (CBD) in Beijing, China, January 15, 2021. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo

Moreover, although Chinese per capita debt rose over those two decades, it was equal to only 21 per cent of median wealth in mid-2019.

In the US, by contrast, per capita debt amounted to 95 per cent of Americans’ median wealth in mid-2019, up from 76 per cent in mid-2000. This faster debt increase slowed the rise in median Americans’ net wealth.

These numbers confirm the findings of Angus Deaton and Anne Case that the lives of working-class Americans have deteriorated dramatically, relative not only to the top 1 per cent of the US population but also to their Chinese counterparts.

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CHINA CLOSING THE GAP ON NET NATIONAL WEALTH WITH AMERICA

At the macroeconomic level, data from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences indicate that China is closing the gap with the US in terms of net national wealth even faster than in terms of GDP.

After noting differences in the valuation of assets such as real estate, China’s GDP (at market exchange rates) and net national wealth were both around 12 per cent of US levels in 2000.

By 2018, China’s GDP (at US$13.4 trillion, or around US$10,000 per capita) had reached 65 per cent of the US level, while its net national wealth of US$88.6 trillion was 80 per cent of the US level of US$110 trillion.

China’s 2018 net-wealth-to-GDP ratio of 6.6 was similar to that of France and higher than the US ratio of 5.3, and only slightly lower than Australia’s ratio of 6.8.

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China’s net national wealth soared by 28 per cent, 25.3 per cent and 11.5 per cent respectively during the last three Five-Year Plans, driven by sustained high savings and investment rates of 40 to 50 per cent of GDP. China’s domestic asset prices benefited from the government’s policy of moving toward market-determined prices, interest rates and exchange rates.

Strikingly, the Chinese state owned 162.8 trillion yuan (US$25 trillion), or 24.6 per cent, of the country’s net national wealth at the end of 2019. The household sector held 77.4 per cent, or 512.6 trillion yuan, with China having net claims on the rest of the world equal to 2 per cent of net national wealth.

People ride past a pedestrian bridge with a banner in Beijing
People ride past a pedestrian bridge with a banner in Beijing

In contrast, the US household sector held US$117.3 trillion, or 111.7 per cent, of US net national wealth at the end of 2019, with the balance being net debt of US$10.6 trillion owed mostly by the federal government to foreign creditors.

The Chinese state increased its share of net national wealth through rapid improvements in public infrastructure that benefited ordinary people rather than just elites. High levels of state-owned assets should enable the government, in the new 14th Five-Year Plan, to recapitalise the pension and social security sector, effectively transferring wealth to low-income workers.

Moreover, with 90 per cent of households now owning homes, and real wages having increased by about 3 per cent per year for a decade, China can now rely on consumption as its main growth engine.

This explains why Chinese policymakers are less afraid of economic decoupling from the US than American policymakers may assume. At the same time, China benefits from globalisation, so it has little interest in attacking the global order (or the US).

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CHINA MOTIVATED TO BE RESPONSIBLE GLOBAL ACTOR

Those who argue that rising gross debt levels pose a danger to China should note that its debt (like Japan’s) is mostly domestic, while the country is a net lender to the world.

This contrasts with the US net liability to the world of 11.7 per cent of its net wealth, or over one-half of its GDP and rising.

A high level of debt matters only if there are no assets to back it. Through decisive actions to control firms’ debt, the Chinese corporate leverage ratio declined from 160.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2017 to 151 per cent by the end of 2019.

FILE PHOTO: A man stands on an overpass with an electronic board showing Shanghai and Shenzhen stoc
FILE PHOTO: A man stands on an overpass with an electronic board showing Shanghai and Shenzhen stock indexes, at the Lujiazui financial district in Shanghai, China January 6, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song

With an ageing population but growing wealth, China must address the common global challenges of social inequality and climate change. Shared prosperity is shared peace. No one is truly prosperous if prosperity is insufficiently shared.

China thus has every reason to be a responsible global actor by tackling its own social and climate problems, instead of diverting resources to stoke a rivalry with the US.

With greater wealth comes greater social responsibility. In 2019, the combined net wealth of the US and China reached 227 per cent of global GDP. These two superpowers need to stop quarrelling and start solving global problems together.

Andrew Sheng is Distinguished Fellow at the Asia Global Institute at the University of Hong Kong and a member of the UNEP Advisory Council on Sustainable Finance. Xiao Geng, Chairman of the Hong Kong Institution for International Finance, is a professor and Director of the Research Institute of Maritime Silk-Road at Peking University HSBC Business School.

 






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