The International Financial Crisis and the Rise of China
The author is a former Mayor of Londons Director of Economic and
Business Policy, equivalent to the present position of Deputy Mayor Visiting
Professor at Antai College of Economics and
Management, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China
The contrast of China and Russia over 18 years
I
want to start with an article I wrote in March 1992. Its title is
self-explanatory - Why the economic reform succeeded in China and will fail in
Russia and Eastern Europe. Equally as important as the title is the date the
article was
written in March 1992 and published in September 1992. As this is an article written 18 years
ago it is not a post facto commentary on
events which had happened but a prediction on what would take place happily
in the case of China and unhappily in the case of Russia. For those who are
interested it is possible to read it in Russian here
http://ablog.typepad.com/keytrendsinglobalisation/1992/03/index.html
and in
English here
http://ablog.typepad.com/keytrendsinglobalisation/1992/04/index.html.
This is part of my blog
Key Trends in Globalisation which is at
http://ablog.typepad.com/keytrendsinglobalisation/.
As
the test of any theory
is that it predicts what will happen I believe that the 18 years which have
taken place since this article was written, and the events in Russia and China
which it predicted, validate its overall conclusions and make it worthwhile to
return to this analysis including for what it reveals about what will take
place in the future . I want to examine the reasons why it was possible to
predict these trends in advance and analyse what has taken place since.
China and Russia as seen in 1992
I
came to Moscow for the first time in December 1991, I
moved here in March 1992 and lived here for eight years. The reason for being
here was because it was perfectly possible to foresee that an economic
catastrophe was going to take place in Russia if the policies that were being
pursued at that time were followed and that there was an alternative model
which could have been adopted
- the extremely successful economic reforms which were carried
out in China.
I
think it will be fair to say that the majority of people to whom I presented
this view in 1992 found this idea fantastic. As I was told on several
occasions, both by the government of the time and by the opposition: there
is nothing which Russia can learn from China.
I
remember having a debate with Alexander Lifshits, who
at that time was the economic adviser to the president, in Oryol.
He was so agitated when I said that
there was a great deal to be learned from China that he especially demanded to
come back onto the stage to contradict such a view - as I had spoken after him.
18
years later the balance sheet of what occurred is very clear. China has become
the second greatest economic power in the world and has had the most rapid
economic growth in human history. Unfortunately the catastrophe that it was perfectly
possible to foresee in advance in Russia did occur - between 1992 and 1998
Russia suffered the most rapid decline in its economy in any major country in
history. I was a personal witness to something which I did not like seeing -
which was economic catastrophe and decline in Russia.
After
2000 I had to return to Britain as I was in charge of economic policy in
London, as the Mayor of Londons Director of Economic and Business Policy,
equivalent to the present position of Deputy Mayor. And I am now in China as
Visiting Professor at Antai College of Economics and
Management in Shanghais Jiao Tong University - where I see the immense drive of the
Chinese economy at first hand.
Western and Chinese economic theory
I
want to describe here an economic policy in China which has been not only
extraordinarily strong as regards its macroeconomic principles but also as
regards its practical economic management. I could describe this in two ways
one 'Western and one Chinese. But in reality I believe they describe the
same thing. I also want to link this description to the current events in the
world financial crisis.
The
first description could be made in the terms used by John Maynard Keynes in The General Theory of Employment, Interest and
Money. He said: a somewhat
comprehensive socialisation of investment will prove the only means of securing
an approximation to full employment. This was the conclusion of one of the
great figures of Western economic theory.
I
could also describe it in Chinese terms. Deng Xiaoping,
one of the greatest economic geniuses in history, described it in quite
different words to Keynes. He described a process he termed socialism with
Chinese characteristics ("a socialist market economy" as they call it today in
China).
Its
not very interesting in my opinion which words you use to designate the process
because they are describing the same thing.
In
the recollections of her father Deng Xiaoping, by his daughter Deng Rong, there is a very moving passage on the first page in
which she explains the unleashing of the cultural revolution in China and the chaos that this lead to. She explained
that because people were trying to avoid universal economic laws they led China
into ten years of setbacks . And one of the greatest
achievements of her father was to sort out this mess and to bring China back to
its very successful path.
Similarly
the reason that
it was possible to see in advance both the catastrophe in Russia and the
extraordinary growth of China was because they were the results of universal economic processes which nobody can escape. Of course each
country is a specific combination, and so Britain or Russia just as much has
British characteristics, or Russian characteristics as China has Chinese
characteristics. It follows that no country can successfully mechanically
apply the policies of another. But these specific combinations in each country
are made up of universal elements.
So
what Im going to describe is analysed not in Chinese terms, or in Western terms,
but in universal economic laws. And that is also why it was possible to see
what was going to happen in advance both in Russia and in China. To bring this
analysis up to date I want to look at how these processes are related to
present economic events.
The international financial crisis
Let
us start with the present international financial crisis and examine the way in
which US has responded to it and the way which China has responded to this. It
will be possible to see from this the connections to the economic
processes which have taken place in China and Russia in the last two decades.
To
briefly summarise the scale of current international financial events Slide 1
shows the size of what are now the largest bank rescues in history.
The most important figure is the one on the right at the bottom showing the
scale of the financial bailouts given to the major banks as a result of the
financial crisis. As can be seen it amounts to about 25% of world GDP. That gives the type
of scale of intervention by the state that has occurred into the major
economies of the world.
Slide 1
Slide
2 shows what had been occurring prior to this crisis. It graphs the capital
ratios for the US and UK banks that is how these banks had become
progressively more decapitalised, i.e. in a riskier position.
Slide 2
Slide
3 shows the number of bank crises and the number of deposit insurance schemes
from the 1960 onwards it illustrates the trend toward bigger crises.
This
directly financial dimension, however, is the superficial, outward, part of
what is taking place. It is necessary to go deeper into the mechanism of what
is taking place and driving the financial crisis.
Slide 3
The scale of the decline in production
Turning
to the productive economy it is first necessary to show, as overheated rhetoric is unhelpful, that it is no
exaggeration to say that this is the most serious economic downturn in post
World War II history.
Slide
4 shows the movements of GDP in the combined G7 countries in the main business
cycles since World War II. It shows the
decline in GDP in the business cycle after the 1973 oil price rises, during the
1980 recession under Reagan, after the bursting of the dotcom bubble and
finally the movement of GDP of the present crisis. As you can see the present
decline is of a wholly larger scale than any of the previous ones that is a
downturn of production of a completely different order to anything since World War II.
Slide 4
Slide
5 shows the same trend in industrial production. It shows the index of
industrial output in the G7 countries since 1960. The fall in industrial
production is of about 20% - again far larger than any downturn seen since
World War II.
Slide 5
The effect of the financial crisis on different
countries
Turning
to the impact of the financial crisis on individual countries Slide 6 shows
countries, which have come well through the financial crisis, and the major
economies, which have done particularly badly. It shows the decline in
production in the US, Japan, Germany and other G7 countries and the two
countries that have come most strongly through the crisis India and China.
Considering
China, it achieved 8.7% GDP growth in 2009 and its economy was accelerating growth in
the 4th quarter was up 10.7% year on year. I therefore want to
examine what is the connection between Chinas overall economic policy and its
ability to come so strongly through the financial crisis.
Slide 6
Reality and myth about the international financial crisis
The
first thing which it is necessary to do is to see clearly the nature of what is
happening in the international financial crisis - as opposed to some myths
about it.
Sometimes
it may be read that the crisis is due to some problems of the American consumer
or perhaps its only caused by unwise loans by banks in the US to people buying
houses. In that case it would be rather easy to deal with. But in reality these
are not the causes of the crisis, they are simply its symptoms. Nor are they
the way that the crisis is working itself out. Nor,
therefore, can they be the way to deal with the crisis.
In
order to show whats actually happening in the financial crisis l first
consider as comparison the most classic of all economic downturns the
post-1929 depression in the United States. Slide 7 shows the movement of the
components of US Gross National Product (GNP) after 1929. Taking first GNP
itself the fall was very severe almost 30%. Consumer expenditure followed GNP
rather closely. Government consumption continued to rise throughout the
depression - incidentally not only under Roosevelt but also under Hoover.
What
drove the depression, however, was what happened to investment. If the fall in
GNP is about 30%, the fall in investment was almost 80%. That was therefore an
investment collapse. This was the driving force of the US Great Depression
after 1929.
Slide 7
Turning
to what is taking place currently, Slide 8 shows what
is happening to the components of US GDP in the present economic downturn. You
will see that the pattern is almost exactly the same, as after 1929 not, of
course, the magnitude of the shifts. The graph commences in 2006 because it was at that point that
the downturn in US investment started.
The
decline in US GDP was 3.8% at its worse, and the fall in consumer expenditure was 1.8%. As after 1929 government expenditure
rises continuously. The situation is
again dominated by a huge downturn in investment. Not of course the 80%
downturn in investment that occurred after 1929 but still a downturn in
investment which approached 35% of GDP. It is quite clear that it is this
downturn in fixed investment which dominates and is driving the recession.
Slide 8
In
order to make this trend still clearer, and to put it in money terms, Slide 9
shows the changes in US GDP in dollar terms since this graph was made revised official figures
have been issued which show exactly the same trends but in an even more
dramatic form.
Between
the beginning of the US economic downturn, after the 2nd
quarter of 2008, and the 4th quarter of 2009, US GDP, in current
price terms, declined by $82 billion. US personal consumption, however,
increased by $14 billion. US government expenditure increased by $19 billion.
US net exports rose by $308 billion. However US fixed investment fell by $448
billion. In short the entire decline in US GDP was accounted for by the decline
in fixed investment.
Slide 9
In other words
if you read certain Western commentators, and I imagine its repeated in
the Russian press, that the economic downturn is something to do with the
exhaustion of the US consumer this is simply factually untrue. There is no
serious downturn in the consumption in the United States. But there is a large scale collapse of
investment in the United States.
Lets
go now go on and look at what is happening in the other countries.
(next part)