Publications /
Opinion

Back
The Third Plenum and China’s Economic Growth Challenges
Authors
August 2, 2024

China’s economy grew by 4.7% year-on-year in the second quarter of 2024, after 5.3% in the first quarter of the year (Figure 1). As in 2023, the official target has been set at 5% for 2024 (Figure 2).

f1

f2

Naturally, great attention has been paid to the decisions of the Third Plenum of the 20th Communist Party of China Party Congress on July 15-18, a four-day meeting in which the country’s leadership sets out the direction of economic policy. The last such event was held in 2018. Do the conclusions of the Third Plenum point out policy actions that will address China’s current economic growth challenges?

Four major challenges can be identified for Chinese economic growth in the coming years. First is the exhaustion of the real-estate sector as a growth factor, after having reached up to a quarter of the country's GDP. The restrictions established in 2021 by the Chinese government on access to cheap credit for developers, because of concerns about the size of the real estate bubble—see Figure 3—curtailed the boom but also exposed the fragility of developers’ assets. Since then, there has been a sharp drop in home sales, new construction, and investment in the sector.

f3

In this regard, any comprehensive solution to the challenge must include creation of a new source of housing demand. Migrant housing demand may constitute such a source, but that will require a reform of the Hukou system (delinking immigrants and their families from their place of origin and thereby giving them access to public health and education facilities in their place of work). It would also require permitting collectively owned land to be used as collateral for mortgage loans.

The Third Plenum’s decisions refer to such Hukou and rural land reforms. Housing will likely remain a drag on growth in 2024, stabilizing gradually in 2025, but the proposed reforms indicate a political willingness to proceed with a comprehensive new housing strategy.

Local government debt is the second major challenge for the Chinese economy. This debt is linked to shrinking local government revenues from the sale of land to real-estate developers. The degree of exposure of Chinese banks to both, with possible consequences in terms of loan losses, could negatively affect the supply of credit in the economy.

The Third Plenum decisions stressed the need for fiscal policy reform, with the establishment of a fiscal structure under which revenues and expenditures of central and local governments are more precisely defined and better aligned. The decision lacks details on stricter discipline underlying fiscal expenditure, including prevention of new increases in local government hidden debt.  In the near term, it will be worth watching whether the government will roll out new measures to mitigate the fiscal difficulties faced by local governments.

The third challenge for growth is a problem with domestic demand by families. Chinese families took on large debts to buy real estate during the boom, and domestic spending cuts have accompanied the housing turbulence. Even though it increased after the end of ‘Covid zero’ last year, consumption remains on a trajectory below that before the pandemic. Measures of consumer confidence point to this. Private investments for the domestic market, as well as hiring, have fallen, accompanying this retraction of domestic consumer demand.

What about the external sector as a form of compensation for the weakness of domestic demand? A fourth challenge to Chinese growth is the external resistance to such an increase in exports as an alternative to domestic demand. This resistance that has followed on from the intensification of geopolitical rivalry abroad, especially between China and the United States and other advanced economies.

The Chinese lead in clean energy technology has, in fact, been accompanied by a strong expansion, for example, in sales of electric vehicles abroad. Chinese passenger car exports have surpassed Japan’s, while Chinese companies are seeking to strengthen their investment positions abroad.

Chinese exports show no sign of slowing, despite new tariffs and extensions to trade restrictions abroad (Figure 4). But the risks that exports will be subject to additional market access restrictions are high.

f4

The Third Plenum showed no change in the Chinese leadership’s approach of stimulating the supply-side of the economy rather than the demand side, and insulating the economy from external threats. Supporting consumption received very little attention. Idle capacity is high in many sectors, reflecting the excess investments relative to levels of demand.

To understand how these four challenges intertwine, it is worth going back to the beginning of the last decade. In December 2011, when I was one of the vice-presidents of the World Bank, I attended a ceremony in Beijing at which then-president Hu Jintao made a major statement about the need for an inevitable “rebalancing” of the Chinese economy. There would have to be a gradual redirection towards a new growth pattern, no longer associated with investment rates of close to 50% of GDP, and in which domestic consumption would increase in relation to investments and exports.

Also, President Hu Jintao said, an effort would be needed to consolidate local insertion in the highest rungs of the added-value ladder in global value chains, something that was effectively sought. Services should also increase their weight in GDP relative to manufacturing. There would no longer be the double-digit GDP growth rates of previous decades, but growth would no longer be, as then-premier Wen Jiabao said in 2007, “unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable”.

Given the low level of domestic consumption in GDP (which persists) and, therefore, the dependence on investments and trade balances, the transition would run the risk of experiencing an abrupt drop in the pace of growth. To allay fears of an abrupt slowdown, waves of credit-driven overinvestment in infrastructure and housing followed in later years. A second round was implemented in 2015–2017 in response to a housing slowdown and stock market decline. This was in addition, of course, to the expansion policies adopted during the pandemic crisis in 2020.

In effect, the decline in Chinese GDP growth rates occurred only gradually, to 6% in 2019. Now, however, the lever of overinvestment in real estate and infrastructure has run out. Not only because of the debt levels that accompanied its extensive use, but also because, at the margin, its returns in terms of GDP growth have started to yield a declining contribution.

Two reforms would have a strong effect on growth. First, social protection should be reinforced to convince Chinese people to save less. Furthermore, the proposal made by President Hu Jintao in 2011 to “rebalance” public and private companies should be revived, with a consequent gain in productivity given higher levels of productivity in the case of private companies.

Ahead of the Third Plenum, such reforms did not seem likely to be prioritized, and indeed they did not appear in the conclusions of the Third Plenum. A radical change in the mood of foreign investors since the third quarter of 2023, as well as demographic dynamics in the form of an ageing population, also constitute economic growth challenges for China.

However, even though China’s economic growth path remained steady in the first half of 2024—with exports, manufacturing investment, and travel-related consumer spending compensating for the drag from the property sector—rebalancing demand dependency from abroad to domestic consumers was a glaring absence at the Third Plenum.

Otaviano Canuto is a former vice president and a former executive director at the World Bank, a former executive director at the International Monetary Fund, and a former vice president at the Inter-American Development Bank. He is also a former deputy minister for international affairs at Brazil’s Ministry of Finance and a former professor of economics at the University of São Paulo and the University of Campinas, Brazil. Currently, he is a senior fellow at the Policy Center for the New South and a nonresident senior fellow at Brookings Institution.

RELATED CONTENT

  • August 3, 2021
    Cette étude concerne l'économie de la Turquie entre 1960 et 2020. Sur cette longue période, deux indicateurs ont été privilégiés : le taux de croissance et le taux d'inflation, analysant leur évolution, mettant en évidence un « avant Erdogan » et un « après Erdogan ». Un « avant Erdogan », entre 1960 et 2003 tout d'abord. Entre 1960 et 2003, les taux de croissance et les taux d'inflation sont très irréguliers, parfois négatifs pour le taux de croissance, mais pouvant aussi dépasser ...
  • Authors
    July 16, 2021
    The BDA Currents: Where Diplomacy Meets Business, is the Brussels Diplomatic Academy’s annual report covering the wider geopolitical and other factors influencing and affecting the world of diplomacy, international relations and global business. The journal focuses on issues of topical interest around the centers of global power, influence and importance, including the continents of Europe and Africa, the Middle East, China, India & Asia, Russia and the Commonwealth of Independe ...
  • Authors
    Jihad Azour
    February 5, 2021
    This article was originally published on IMF blog.  The road to recovery for the Middle East and Central Asia region will hinge on containment measures, access to and distribution of vaccines, the scope of policies to support growth, and measures to mitigate economic scarring from the pandemic. The virus’s second wave, which began in September, hurt many countries in the region, where infection and death rates far surpassed those seen during the first wave . Most countries resumed ...
  • Authors
    December 30, 2020
    According to this month’s OECD economic outlook, global GDP --- which took a huge hit from the pandemic and is still 3% below its level of a year ago – will not recover its pre-pandemic level until the end of 2021. In a downside scenario, the return could take almost a year longer. The OECD predictions, which imply high and protracted unemployment, are in line with the view of many other official and private organizations. The arrival of effective vaccines such as Pfizer-BioNTech wa ...
  • Authors
    December 22, 2020
    After reaching a peak against other currencies in March this year, the dollar fell by almost 15% until the beginning of December. According to Bloomberg, asset portfolio managers have been assuming "short" positions against the dollar, that is, betting on its fall ahead. The dollar is expected to devalue against the euro, the yen, and the Chinese RMB in 2021. The peak last March, during the coronavirus financial shock, reflected the search for a safe haven in short-term US bonds or ...
  • Authors
    December 7, 2020
    The pandemic is accelerating history, in the sense that it is leading to the speeding up of some recent trends. In the case of globalization, the pandemic will not reverse it, but it will reshape it. Here we take a bird’s eye view of global trade during the pandemic, relate it to previous trends, and guess how global value chain managers and government trade policymakers are likely to react. A Bird’s Eye View of Global Trade during the Pandemic World trade took a deep dive during ...
  • Authors
    December 2, 2020
    Les relations politiques entre la Chine et l’Australie se sont fortement dégradées avec, à la clé, la mise en œuvre de la part du géant asiatique de barrières tarifaires et non tarifaires. Si les produits agricoles (orge, bœuf, vin, homards) ont été les premières matières premières à être touchées, les exportations australiennes de gaz naturel liquéfié pourraient également être dans le viseur de Pékin. Canberra dispose, néanmoins, d’une carte maîtresse : son minerai de fer dont le s ...
  • November 25, 2020
    Coup sur coup, deux accords géants sont venus marquer l’actualité internationale. L’un, est économique et sonne comme un coup de tonnerre : c’est le RCEP (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership), vaste accord commercial asiatique, signé le 15 novembre 2020. Cette date restera dans l’histoire comme ayant associé la Chine à un ensemble de pays asiatiques. Il inclut l’ASEAN (Association des Nations d’Asie du Sud-est, à l’initiative de la démarche) mais, aussi, le Japon et la Corée ...
  • Authors
    September 28, 2020
    CGTN, 25 September 2020 China’s economy keeps recovering from the coronavirus pandemic-led crisis through the third quarter of 2020, as revealed by the numbers of August activity. Its GDP grew by 3.2% in the second quarter, after falling by 6.8% in the first quarter, in both cases as compared from a year before. It is now the only major economy expected to exhibit growth this year. Successful containment of the pandemics has allowed it to be first-in-first-out relative to others. ...
  • September 18, 2020
    On assiste, ces derniers mois, à un rebond des cours de l'or, le portant vers de nouveaux sommets. L'analyse des cours de ce précieux métal depuis deux siècles montre une grande stabilité jusqu'en 1971, date de l'abandon de la convertibilité or /dollar par les Etats-Unis, mais aussi de son mouvement erratique depuis cette date. Soumise aux lois du marché, cette matière première voit son cours dépendre essentiellement de la demande. Evolution qui confirme cet actif comme valeur refug ...