To stem the tide of negative sentiment and ward off financial peril, observers warn that Chinese leadership is being hard-pressed to change tactics by employing substantial stimulus measures or more impactful policy reforms.
- “It’s largely an issue of confidence,” said He Jun, a senior analyst with Beijing-based public policy consultancy Anbound, pointing to the plunge in China’s capital markets this week.
- “There are lots of economic issues in China. But governments tend to react only after shocks have been generated.”
“As far as the policy implications, [policymakers] are caught between a rock and a hard place,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner of SPI Asset Management in Bangkok.
A particular X factor, he said, is whether Donald Trump wins a second term as US president in November and heaps additional pressure on Chinese exports as he did in his first term.
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- Over the past few decades, China has relied on debt-fueled infrastructure spending by local governments to achieve rapid economic growth, but analysts contend that such a development model is looking less sustainable.
- His comments were published to his personal blog on Tuesday.
Luo added that authorities need to manage expectations more proactively, and that measures must be introduced “promptly and decisively”.
But he also acknowledged that Beijing’s fiscal measures may be “less than what the market expects”, despite its pro-growth stance.
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Markets will closely watch the event to discern whether any strong measures will be taken, as China has struggled in its post-Covid recovery, with increasing economic volatility.
Some analysts expect that the fiscal deficit ratio – meaning total money spent in excess of income – will be set at 3.5-3.8 per cent of GDP, around the same as 2023’s.
- “Faced with a low-inflation environment that has lasted for more than 10 years, China must implement more expansionary fiscal and monetary policies, especially expansionary fiscal policies,” Yu said earlier this month in an interview with the China Finance 40 Forum, a Beijing-based think tank.
- “Only in this way can China reverse the continued decline in economic growth and low market confidence.”
Government officials have let stock markets go so far because they are focused more on the macroeconomy, said Song Seng Wun, an economic adviser at CGS-CIMB Securities in Singapore.
Tweaks to the markets would help relatively few people compared with economic reforms that create jobs and save entire companies, Song said.
“The bottom line is social stability,” he said, suggesting that China’s leaders agree on this priority. “When you look at it from a bigger, broader perspective of economic policy, [stock market fixes] may not be as important.”
And Innes at SPI Asset Management said other patchwork measures, such as the lowering of interest rates and adding of liquidity, also might not help.
“It’s just a vicious circle,” he said. “Where do we go from here?”
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