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Macroeconomic Trends and Policies

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Some hyperinflationary episodes but were well controlled. How was stability achieved? ... Less uncertainty so that decision-makers in the household, business, and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Macroeconomic Trends and Policies


1
Macroeconomic Trends and Policies
  • Lecturer Zhigang Li

2
Outline
  • Trends
  • Macroeconomic policies
  • Stability
  • Fiscal policy
  • Monetary policy

3
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4
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5
Household Saving Rates
6
Saving (percent of GDP)
7
Stability
  • Unlike many other transitional economies (East
    Europe), Chinas transition has been generally
    stable.
  • GDP
  • Savings rate
  • Some fluctuations
  • Some hyperinflationary episodes but were well
    controlled

8
How was stability achieved?
  • Gradual transition
  • Less uncertainty so that decision-makers in the
    household, business, and government sectors were
    able to adjust their saving and investment
    decisions gradually.
  • Endogenous macroeconomic policies
  • Policy that kept the real value of deposit
  • Decentralization and recentralization

9
National Saving
  • Before the reform
  • The state-owned sector was the main source of
    saving
  • After the reform
  • Household saving rates increased rapidly, making
    up for the loss of saving from state-owned sector
  • As of 1995 households were generating 70 of
    domestic saving

10
Why household saving increased dramatically after
1978?
  • Income growth
  • Reduced expected security in old age (e.g. due to
    the decline in the number of children)
  • Household investment opportunities exploded
  • Stable expectation of the future

11
Banking and Macroeconomic Stability
  • Bank as intermediate between saving and
    investment
  • Household saving mainly rely on banks to convert
    them into investment. Efficiency of the
    conversion determines the impact of transition on
    national investment rate
  • Banks as governments instrument to stabilize
    economy
  • Strengthening government financing ability
  • Continuing support for the state-owned sector
  • Buffer negative shocks In 1995 banks pay 24 for
    long-term deposits but charge 14 for long-term
    loans.

12
The Banking Sector
  • Until very recently Chinas financial system
    lagged behind the rest of the economy in the
    transition process.
  • The banking sector has been one of Chinas most
    protected industries.

13
Assets of banking institutions
  • 2003 2005
  • Big Four 55 52.5
  • Joint-stock banks 13.8 15.5
  • City banks 5.3 5.4
  • Others 25.9 26.6
  • Policy banks 7.7
  • Rural credit 9.6 9.9

14
Features
  • A large retail banking network, including rural
    credit cooperatives in nearly all townships.
  • Financing for SOEs shifted strongly toward
    reliance on bank financing during the mid-1980s.
  • The investments were highly inefficient an
    enormous stock of nonperforming loans built up in
    the banking system.

15
Non-Performing Loans (NPL)
  • By late 1990s NPLs were around 40 of total
    lending (usually it should be less than 5).
  • Since 1998, the highest priority of policy makers
    has been to strengthen the financial system.
  • Reduce the stock of NPL
  • Control the flow of NPL

16
Fiscal Policy
  • Fiscal system
  • Decentralization
  • Fiscal reform 1994
  • Expenditure and dificit

17
Fiscal Decentralization (Tsui and Wang, 2004)
  • Fiscal decentralization (starting in 1980s) was
    an attempt to give local governments more stable
    fiscal revenue and more flexibility in making
    local fiscal decision.

18
Main Features of Fiscal Decentralization in China
  • Intergovernmental Fiscal contracts
  • Fiscal contracts between successive levels of
    governments define rules not to trespass on the
    tax rights of local governments.
  • Local governments have ownership rights over
    their off-budget resources.
  • Extra-budgetary revenue (charges levied by
    administrative and institutional units) grew at
    27 per year during 1982-95, reaching similar
    amount as the budgetary revenue.
  • Extra-system revenue (e.g. profits from TVEs) is
    also significant.

19
Trade-off of decentralization
  • Positive
  • Align the interest of local government with local
    economy, thus enhancing local growth
  • Motivate local officials to collect taxes
  • Negative
  • Weakened ability for the central government to
    redistribute income, raising inequality
  • Reduced power for the central government to
    control the macroeconomic economy, raising
    instability

20
Trend of budget
  • From 1978 to 1994 the budgetary share of GDP has
    declined steadily from about 34 to 10.8 percent.
  • In other developing countries, the budgetary
    share was over 30 percent on average.
  • Since 1994 the budgetary share steadily
    increased, reaching around 20 percent by now.

21
Why budgetary share has declined since 1978?
  • Small and shrinking tax base State-owned firms
    were the main contributor of fiscal revenue by
    remitting profits.
  • In early 1990s the state sector produced 40 of
    GNP but contribute 80 of fiscal revenues.
  • Incentive issue No uniform or stable agreement
    on tax sharing between local and central
    governments (case-by-case bargaining).

22
The 1994 Fiscal Reform
  • Replacing the revenue remittance system with a
    tax system state and non-state sector pay
    uniform tax rates
  • VAT 17 percent for most firms (small firms pay
    6 of sales tax)
  • Sharing of tax revenues between local and central
    governments is fixed.

23
Central government share of budgetary revenue and
expenditure
24
Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers
  • Rebate of taxes
  • Accounting for 47 of central-local transfers in
    2000
  • Increasing inter-regional fiscal inequality
  • Discretionary transfers
  • Account for 48.7 of total transfers
  • For good purposes e.g. western development,
    education, social security
  • No formal distribution rules, making it hard for
    the transfers to reach the bottom
  • Provide incentive for poor regions to stay poor.

25
Fiscal deficit policy
  • Fiscal policy may shape macroeconomic conditions
    through running deficits (stimulating demand and
    the overall economy) or surpluses (restricting
    demand).
  • Chinas fiscal policy has been passive and
    modest.
  • Chinas fiscal deficits were kept within 1 of
    GDP in most years of 1980s and early 1990s.
  • After 1998, China faced increasing pressure of
    unemployment (SOE layoff and East Asian Financial
    Crisis). China increased deficit well over 2 of
    GDP. As the economy went well, the deficit was
    reduced to 1.1 of GDP in 2005.

26
Why the deficit policy of China has been modest?
  • Possible reasons
  • The stock of debt may actually be big. Although
    official debt was reported to be 18 of GDP,
    adjusted figure (including all types of
    government obligation) suggests that Chinas debt
    is 55 of GDP.
  • Future spending demand (thus the demand for debt)
    may be very high. This is due to the possible
    need to finance the debt-ridden state banks and
    social security systems.

27
Chinese Monetary Policy
  • Two characteristics of monetary policy in China
  • Passive and not independent
  • Expansionary cycles have been accompanied by
    acceleration in credit provision. In contrast,
    during austerity phases credit supply was
    reduced.
  • Interest rates have never been deregulated.
    Adjustments of interest rates have never been
    quick enough to fully reflect the range of
    cyclical effects. Real interest rates have been
    significantly negative during high inflation and
    significantly positive during low inflation.
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