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    China Business
     May 1, 2008
Page 1 of 2
China's inflation carries long-term risks
By Pieter Bottelier

China's tolerance of inflation has a low threshold because of the risks it poses to social and political stability. That is why the government and the people have been worried about a steep rise in the consumer price index (CPI) since the first half of 2007. Is this the beginning of a new and potentially dangerous inflation cycle?

Earlier cycles were often associated with severe social hardship and political turmoil. The Tiananmen Square disaster on June 4, 1989, might have been prevented if the high inflation of those days had not brought so many additional demonstrators to the square frightening the leadership. Older political leaders remember that the communists' defeat of the nationalists in the Chinese civil war

 

of 1945-1949 was greatly assisted by the runaway inflation of those years, which sharply reduced the popularity of Chiang Kai-shek's Republic of China government.

In the economic arena, the greatest challenge facing China's leadership at the present time is a new round of consumer price inflation. It started in the first half of 2007. The CPI rose by 8.7% year-over-year (yoy) in February 2008, the steepest increase in over a decade. The index ebbed to 8.3% in March. For the first quarter of 2008 as a whole the index was 8%. [1]

The current inflationary cycle is different in origin from the previous one of 1992-1995, which was triggered by endogenous excessive credit expansion and economic "overheating". [2] The present cycle was ignited by domestic supply disruptions in the food sector - mainly pigs and poultry - and reinforced by sharp international price increases for oil, coal, soy beans, grains and metals. The combined effect was to drive up the price of many food items, especially pork, poultry, eggs, vegetable oil and dairy products.

CPI inflation received an extra jolt in the early months of 2008 from the worst-ever transportation and power supply disruptions caused by severe snowstorms. The non-food CPI has remained surprisingly modest so far (at least through March), but there are some troubling signs that inflation may become more pervasive - for example, in March the producer price index (PPI) for industrial goods rose to 8%.

China's economic growth rate accelerated from 10.1% in 2004 to 11.9% in 2007 [3], but this was mainly due to an increase in net external demand (trade surplus), not domestic demand, as was the case in the earlier inflation cycle. Although growth was extremely high, domestic monetary expansion in 2007 was relatively moderate and the margin of loanable funds in the banking system [4] actually contracted due to the aggressive sterilization of excess bank liquidity by China's central bank. Tight liquidity in the banking system drove up short-term inter-bank rates and increased their volatility in 2007. It is therefore hard to argue that the recent CPI increases are due to an "overheated" economy, as was the case in 1992-3.

China's rising import demand for soy beans, oil, coal, metals and other commodities has undoubtedly contributed to the global commodity price increases of recent years, yet for economic planners in Beijing such price increases have to be seen as exogenous [5].

In principle, China should not aim to reduce global commodity prices by deliberately slowing down domestic demand, unless a slow down is necessitated by domestic policy requirements. When inflation is driven by exogenous factors beyond the government’s control, as has essentially been the case since early 2007, a further tightening of monetary policy may have perverse effects: it could reduce employment and slow growth without necessarily reducing inflation. Yet, the government is understandably concerned that a prolonged period of relatively high CPI inflation may generate inflation expectations, which could trigger new inflation dynamics that are even harder to control.

In this context it is important to draw attention to the fact that China's broad money supply (M2) as a percentage of GDP - around 160% since 2004 - is exceptionally high by international standards. Moreover, China’s M2 (cash + time deposits + demand deposits) is becoming increasingly liquid [6] as a result of a gradual shift of household deposits from savings accounts to checking accounts or demand deposits.

This shift has been going on for some years, reflecting a growing need for larger cash balances to pay for consumer durables and down payments for mortgage loans. In recent years, the shift accelerated, presumably because deposit rates were lower than inflation for most of the period since the middle of 2004. Negative real deposit rates made it unattractive to keep money in savings accounts.

China's high M2/GDP ratio combined with the increasing liquidity of household deposits, points to the existence of serious excess liquidity in the economy. Until now this excess liquidity has mainly expressed itself in asset price inflation, not in CPI inflation, but that may change. Excess liquidity does not necessarily trigger CPI inflation, but it facilitates it when expectations take over as the driving factor, which is precisely what the Chinese government is worried about.

The government faces serious dilemmas in how to deal with the current CPI inflation, and thus far Beijing seems to be pursuing a set of right measures: a relatively tight monetary policy while refraining from additional tightening; an increased supply of basic food items from government stocks and imports; and a freeze on some basic food prices in the expectation that the supply disruptions that sparked CPI inflation are temporary. Maintaining price controls and delaying upward price adjustments for energy, however, are a double-edged sword. Faster appreciation of the yuan, as implemented since December 2007, will help on the margin to counter domestic inflation, but it will force accelerated adjustment in low-margin export industries.

A new situation would arise if and when inflation becomes more widespread and extends beyond food into producer goods, general consumer goods and wages. There are some early indications that that may happen [7]. Should those indications persist, China will have to tighten monetary policy. That said, there is still reason to expect that domestic food prices will stabilize later this year of their own accord. The situation is complex and hard to read, and the room for policy mistakes through over-reaction or under-reaction is ample.

During the past 15 years, China's economy has become closely integrated into the global economy. The country cannot avoid the consequences as inflation also reappears on the global scene. The golden age of low inflation, which was associated with intensive globalization during the past 15 years, seems to have come to an end. The next 15 years may well see higher global inflation because of rapidly rising demand in the developing world and supply constraints in minerals (oil, gas, metals) and grains.

Potential role in Doha talks
There is also a serious risk of rising protectionism, which would contribute to global inflation. This can be prevented if nations stick to both the letter and the spirit of the World Trade Organization charter. Given its sharply increased weight in international trade and strong domestic economy, China is now in a position to play a pro-active role in promoting multilateral trade liberalization through the Doha Round. Unfortunately, it has shied away from playing such a role until now.

In the current inflationary cycle, China has been reluctant to increase domestic deposit rates sufficiently to make them positive in real terms, which would encourage long-term savings deposits and thus reduce the liquidity of M2. This may reflect the government's belief that current CPI inflation is driven by temporary domestic supply-side factors and temporary international price hikes beyond its control.

It may also reflect a concern that higher domestic interest rates would: (1) adversely affect the profitability of state enterprises and (2) attract additional hot money inflows, which would require even more sterilization of excess liquidity in the banking system.

The first concern should be resisted on the ground that capital is so cheap in China that it has contributed to overinvestment in manufacturing and other economic imbalances. The second concern does not seem to be well-founded; because China's capital account remains largely closed, the transaction costs of bringing large amounts of speculative capital into the country tend to be high. In light of this, it seems unlikely that hot money inflows are strongly influenced by relatively modest adjustments in domestic interest rates or, for that matter, the nominal exchange rate.

In China's case, it seems more likely that hot money inflows are primarily driven by large anticipated asset price increases - real

Continued 1 2 


China confirms inflation enemy number one (Mar 6, '08)

Inflation gloom in China snow chaos
(Jan 30, '08)


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4. Fried in the financial sun

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7. India shows space muscle with a 10-pack

8. China intensifies war against splittism

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(24 hours to 11:59 pm ET, Apr 29, 2008)

 
 



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