China’s debt dependency alarming – IMF
China’s debt dependency alarming – IMF
China’s dependence on debt is growing at
a “dangerous pace” and it must act to head off a brewing crisis, the
IMF warned Tuesday.
The International Monetary Fund also
said the country’s leaders should kick on with vital reforms or risk a
painful correction in the world’s number two economy, adding that
Beijing’s “unsustainably high” growth goals were adding to the problem.
While the country has made progress in
its attempts to recalibrate the driver of growth, the Fund said failure
to address structural issues could destroy that work.
The IMF’s warning comes weeks after a
global central bank watchdog said China’s banking sector could be facing
an imminent debt crisis, fuelling worries a blowout could send tremors
through the world economy.
In an update to its World Economic
Outlook, the IMF said: “China continues to make progress with the
complex tasks of rebalancing its economy toward consumption and services
and permitting market forces a greater role.
“But the economy’s dependence on credit
is increasing at a dangerous pace, intermediated through an increasingly
opaque and complex financial sector.”
It added: “The high and rising credit
dependence reflects a combination of factors — the pursuit of
unsustainably high growth targets, efforts to prop up unviable
state-owned enterprises… and opportunistic lending by financial
intermediaries in the belief that all debt is implicitly guaranteed by
the government.
“By maintaining high near-term growth
momentum in this manner, the economy faces a growing misallocation of
resources and risks an eventual disruptive adjustment,” it said.
China’s total debt hit 168.48 trillion
yuan ($25 trillion) at the end of last year, equivalent to 249 percent
of national GDP, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a top
government think tank, has estimated.
And last month the Bank for
International Settlements (BIS) — dubbed the central bank of central
banks — said a gauge of Chinese debt had hit a record high in the first
quarter of the year.
Its credit-to-GDP gap reached 30.1
percent in January-March, its highest level ever and far above the 10
percent level associated with risks.
China is seeking to restructure its
economy to make the spending power of its nearly 1.4 billion people a
key driver for growth, instead of massive government investment and
cheap exports.
But the transition is proving painful as
growth rates sit at 25-year lows and key indicators continue to come in
below par, weighing on the global outlook as the Chinese economy is a
key driver for the world.
The economy expanded 6.7 percent in the
April-June period, the same as the first three months of the year and
slowing from 6.9 percent in 2015 — its weakest annual rate in a quarter
of a century.
The IMF said it expected growth of 6.6
percent in 2016 — the same as its forecast in July — slowing to 6.2
percent in 2017 “absent further stimulus”.
It also said it saw inflation rising to
2.1 percent this year and three percent over the medium term as slack in
the industrial sector and downward pressure on goods prices diminish.

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