China, home to a population of over 1.4 billion, is the world’s second-largest economy, with the nation experiencing an average annual growth rate of 6.7 percent since 2012, driven in part by its dominance in manufacturing and its cheap exports of goods.
However, the country’s economy has been steadily losing momentum this year as it adapts to a strict zero-COVID strategy. As a result, business and consumer activity within the country has effectively ground to a halt, much like it did in the early stages of the pandemic, while global demand has dropped and unemployment among youth has soared.
Adding to the country’s woes is a Chinese regime clampdown on the debt of property developers which has seen authorities tighten home-purchase rules and cap lending from banks, while urging powerful property tycoons to pour resources and influence into backing Beijing’s interests.
This prompted a housing market crash that has further hurt the economy over the past year.
Is China’s Economy Falling?
China’s current economy is slowing, with industrial output rising 5 percent year-over-year in October, missing out on market expectations of 5.2 percent growth and slowing from September’s industrial production expansion of 6.3 percent.Meanwhile, retail sales, a gauge of consumption, fell by 0.5 percent in the month of October; the first time they have done so since May when they fell by 6.7 percent after Shanghai, the country’s largest business center, was placed under a city-wide lockdown.
Additionally, the country is suffering from a severely devalued currency this year.
China’s Real Estate Collapse 2021
China’s GDP grew 8.1 percent year-on-year to 114.37 trillion yuan (about $18 trillion) in 2021, matching economists’ expectations.However, economic activity significantly slowed down in the latter part of the year, a trend that has continued for much of this year.
Yet amid a global pandemic and increasingly fraying relations with the United States and other major economies, 2021 will no doubt be remembered for China’s crippling housing market crisis, which still threatens to have financial implications for the wider economy today.
Beijing initiated a large-scale clampdown on developer debt in 2021 in an effort to reign in the market, but the move left developers struggling.
That had a knock-on effect on the real estate industry as a whole, creating a housing slump under which property sales plunged and many homeowners refused to pay their mortgages on properties that had not yet finished construction.
As a result, the property sector, which accounts for one-fifth of China’s GDP, suffered huge losses.
In a sign of more problems to come, Country Garden, China’s largest property developer, reported that its profit in the first half of 2022 plummeted by 96 percent, down $89 million during the first six months of 2022 compared to the $2.2 billion it reported during the same time period in 2021.
China’s Economy in Trouble
At a press conference in Beijing earlier this month, Fu Linghui, spokesperson for the National Bureau of Statistics, acknowledged that China’s strict COVID pandemic containment measures were placing “huge” pressure on China’s current economy, noting that risks to the global economy were rising.“The impact from the triple pressures on economic operations—shrinking demand, supply shocks, and weakening expectations—is growing,” said Fu.
Still, Fu believes China’s economy will likely recover steadily, noting that the country’s economic performance so far this year has shown resistance, despite a resurgence in COVID outbreaks and weakening demand.
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP), meanwhile, has rolled out a number of stimulus measures in an effort to prop up the economy, including a 1 trillion yuan ($146 billion) package announced in August aimed at improving infrastructure, boosting small businesses and real estate, easing power shortages, providing drought relief, and securing rice production during the important mid-season harvest, among others.
In October, the IMF revised its growth forecast for China’s economy in the next two years, lowering its 2023 GDP forecast to 4.4 percent from the original 4.6 percent, noting that a “worsening of China’s property sector crisis could undermine growth.”
Centrally Planned Economy
China was previously a centrally planned economy, also known as a command economy or communist economy, under which economic decisions, including those regarding the production and distribution of goods and the allocation of resources, were made by the regime rather than by market participants or autonomous agents.Does China Have a Mixed Economy?
China transitioned to a mixed economy, a system that blends aspects of both capitalism and communism, following the end of the Maoist period.Under the current economic system, there are both private companies and regime or state-owned entities that coexist, and certain levels of economic freedom are applied regarding the use of capital.
However, regime intervention is still applied in certain areas of the economy, such as in public services and welfare, in order for the country to achieve its social aims.
Deng Xiaoping, former leader of the CCP from December 1978 to November 1989, famously called the system “socialism with Chinese characteristics.”
However, China’s current leader Xi Jinping—who recently secured a third term as head of the CCP—later declared a “new era” of socialist modernization for China under which the CCP has seemingly loosened control over the country’s economy but remains in charge of society in general.