日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

Misreading Chinese rebalancing

Updated: 2013-07-31 09:49

By Stephen S. Roach (China Daily)

  Print Mail Large  Medium  Small    

The composition of GDP is probably the worst metric to use in assessing early-stage progress on economic rebalancing. Eventually, of course, GDP composition will provide the acid test of whether China has succeeded. But the key word here is "eventually." It is far too early to expect significant shifts in the major sources of aggregate demand. For now, it is much more important to examine trends in the potential determinants of Chinese consumption.

From this perspective, there is good reason for optimism, especially given accelerated growth in China's services sector - one of the key building blocks of a consumer-led rebalancing. In the first half of 2013, services output (the tertiary sector) expanded by 8.3 percent year on year - markedly faster than the combined 7.6 percent growth of manufacturing and construction (the secondary sector).

Moreover, the gap between growth in services and growth in manufacturing and construction widened over the first two quarters of 2013, following annual gains of 8.1 percent in both sectors in 2012. These developments - first convergence, and now faster services growth - stand in sharp contrast with earlier trends.

Indeed, from 1980 to 2011, growth in services output averaged 8.9 percent per year, fully 2.7 percentage points less than the combined growth of 11.6 percent in manufacturing and construction over the same period. The recent inversion of this relationship suggests that the structure of Chinese growth is starting to tilt toward services.

Why are services so important for China's rebalancing? For starters, services are far more labor-intensive than the country's traditional growth sectors. In 2011, Chinese services generated 30 percent more jobs per unit of output than did manufacturing and construction. This means that the Chinese economy can achieve its all-important labor-absorption objectives - employment, urbanization, and poverty reduction - with much slower GDP growth than in the past. In other words, a 7-8 percent growth trajectory in an increasingly services-led economy can hit the same labor-absorption targets that required 10 percent growth under China's previous model.

That is good news for three reasons. First, services growth is beginning to tap a new source of labor-income generation, the mainstay of consumer demand. Second, greater reliance on services allows China to settle into a lower and more sustainable growth trajectory, tempering the excessive resource- and pollution-intensive activities driven by the hyper-growth of manufacturing and construction. And, third, growth in the embryonic services sector, which currently accounts for just 43 percent of the country's GDP, broadens China's economic base, creating a significant opportunity to reduce income inequality.

Far from crashing, the Chinese economy is at a pivotal point. The wheels of rebalancing are turning. While that is not showing up in the composition of final demand (at least not yet), the shift from manufacturing and construction toward services is a far more meaningful indicator at this stage in the transformation.

So, too, are signs of newfound policy discipline -such as a central bank that seems determined to wean China off excessive credit creation and fiscal authorities that have resisted the timeworn temptation of yet another massive round of spending initiatives to counter a slowdown. Early steps toward interest-rate liberalization and hints of reform of the antiquated hukou (residential permit) system are also encouraging.

Slowly but surely, the next China is coming into focus. China doubters in the West have misread the Chinese economy's vital signs once again.

The author is a faculty member at Yale University and former chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia. He is the author of The Next Asia.

Project Syndicate

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

Schedule

President Xi visits Central Asia, attends G20, SCO summits

Sept 3 to 13: Pay state visits to Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Sept 5 to 6: Attend the eighth Leaders' Summit of the Group of Twenty (G20) in St. Petersburg.

Sept 13: Attend the 13th Meeting of the Council of Heads of Member States of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Bishkek, the capital of Kyrgyzstan.

Forum

Chinese economy will not collapse

The Chinese government has steered their megacarrier through choppy seas quite successfully.

China's role in G20

I saw a China that is much more confident to put itself forward at G20 summit.

Photos


Beijing backs truce bid in Syria


Ties with Kyrgyzstan upgraded


Student's rare blood bonds Kazakhstan and China


Xi 'travels in time' along the ancient trade route


Xi in Kyrgyzstan for state visit, SCO summit


Silk Road to take on a new look

主站蜘蛛池模板: 香蕉视频在线免费看 | 日韩在线视频二区 | 国产精品久久久久久久午夜 | 国产麻豆一区二区 | 欧美日韩一级在线观看 | 一区二区三区四区国产精品 | 国产黄色精品视频 | 毛片视频网 | 久久久伊人网 | 国产第九页 | 男女爱爱视频免费看 | 国产一区二区三区久久久 | 久操国产在线 | 偷拍超碰| 在线天堂v | 午夜剧场免费看 | 国产激情视频在线播放 | 中文在线字幕av | 69亚洲精品 | 在线观看v片 | 久久超| 亚洲一区二区三区四区在线观看 | 国产在线观看你懂的 | 性一交一乱一乱一视频 | 久久不色| 性v天堂| 色姐 | 国产在线观看成人 | 九九热在线播放 | 成人免费毛片xxx | 国产黄色在线播放 | 永久免费av| 亚洲天天看| 福利片在线播放 | 色网在线 | 天天射影院 | 欧美日韩午夜 | 日本国产在线 | 色婷婷18| 鬼吹灯之天星术在线观看 | 久久午夜片 |