How
vulnerable is China?
S P
SETH
China’s stock market has been very volatile lately, affecting
adversely the fortunes of its small investors who number in the millions. We
will come to that later but first let us see how Xi Jinping is faring since
taking over as president and secretary general of the Communist Party of China
(CPC), late 2012. Since then, President Xi Jinping has been busy consolidating
his power internally and projecting it externally. Internally, he moved fast to
get rid of Bo Xilai, the powerful Communist Party Secretary of Chongqing, who
reportedly had his own political ambitions. Bo’s wife, Gu Kailai, testified
against her husband and that was enough to seal his fate. It took a little
longer for another powerful political foe, Zhou Yongkang, a former security
chief and member of the Party Standing Committee to be put on trial and
convicted for life. In Zhou’s case, his wife and son testified against him. According
to reports circulating at the time, both Bo and Zoe were considered fellow
conspirators, though their trials and convictions were on corruption and
related charges. Convicting on the basis of the testimony of close relatives is
a bit over the top but that is how Bo and Zhou ended up. They both accepted the
justice so delivered. Xi’s power is now virtually unchallenged.
Simultaneously, he is unapologetically entrenching the CPC’s
monopoly power under his leadership. And he has no time for western notions of
democratic elections, free speech and human rights. A leaked party document
cautioned against such subversive notions and activities designed to undercut
the CPC’s power. In other words, China’s model of one party rule is a legitimate
alternative. Indeed, it is considered necessary and effective for economic
growth and social stability and enabling China to uphold and protect its “core
interests”. And these “interests” include its territorial sovereignty and
integrity as projected into South China Sea and East China Sea, where China has
contested sovereign claims over a bunch of island/islets/reefs. It has
simultaneously been creating artificial islands out of the sea and creating a
network of military facilities that is bringing the US and some of the regional
countries together to counter-balance China. For instance, Japan participated, for the
first time, in joint military exercises here in Australia,that included US,
Australia and New Zealand and reportedly involved 30,000 troops. The Japanese
government is also pushing ahead to ditch its pacifist constitution, enabling
it to be part of collective defence with the US. All this is happening against
the backdrop of China’s projection of power in the region.
At the same time, China is also committed to pursue its economic
growth. In the absence of any demonstrable index of popular approval, like
periodic elections and a free press, the validity and durability of China’s
political system depends essentially on a healthy growth rate of its economy,
providing employment and a modicum of economic prosperity for its people. Which
China has achieved, though there are pockets of economic deprivation here and
there. There is a fairly broad sense of dissatisfaction and resentment, though,
with widening income disparities between rich and poor and between rural and
urban sectors. And such resentment is fortified and accentuated with widespread
corruption at all levels of the party hierarchy and administration. Which Xi
Jinping is seeking to deal with, though it has a strong whiff, at times, of
settling some old political scores.
All in all, China’s economic growth since the eighties has been
remarkable, though it is starting to slow down. But, at 7 per cent, it is still
impressive. The Communist Party under Xi Jinping’s leadership not only intends
to keep it this way but improve on it by liberalizing and broadening the economy.
In the midst of such self-assurance on economy, the recent volatility of the
stock market must have come as a rude shock. In a few turbulent weeks, the
market lost over $3 trillion, about one-third of its total valuation. And this
is despite all the measures the authorities took to stop the rout. In its
efforts to broaden the Chinese economy, the government had encouraged China’s
middle classes to invest in the stock market. And they took to it with great
passion at playing the market. With very low returns on bank deposits, the
stock market seemed the ultimate casino which promised easy way to riches. And
that was mostly true as China’s stock markets reached dizzying heights till
recently.
As the markets fell, China’s nearly 90 million middle class stock
market players had to reckon with margin calls for failing stocks. Which
further increased the pressure to sell. With the authorities doing all they
could to stop the fall, but with limited success at that point of time, the
all-powerful image of the CPC took a bit of a hit. Some small investors, who
lost heavily, were critical of the government for not doing enough. They
reckoned they were simply following what their government had encouraged them
to do. Indeed, the authorities had even encouraged investors to play the market
by using their property as collateral. The stock market volatility, therefore,
affects the economy in all sorts of way.
First and the foremost, it is the fading of the wealth effect. And
once that takes on, it might affect consumer spending across the board. At a
time when China is transitioning to a consumer-driven economy, rather than
lopsided emphasis on investment in construction, infrastructure and export
sector, any loss of consumer confidence from a falling or static stock market
is not helpful. Its knock on damaging effect on property market would be
another worry. The authorities have been doing everything possible to stabilize
the situation. They suspended trading in almost half the stocks. They have
injected liquidity. They have extended a hefty credit line to the country’s
major brokerages to buy up shares. And they have cut interest rates. Which has
helped but doesn’t rule out another bout of volatility.
Even though the government has lost some shine to its virtually
omnipotent image, some analysts believe that the stock market turbulence will
settle down, at least in the short period. Even though the stock market lost
over $3 trillions, nearly one-third of its value in a short period, it comes
after a much steeper rise over the past 12 months. In other words, the
diminishing wealth effect might be more psychological than real. But psychological
effect does feel real to many people. It is this image of things going wrong
that would need to be tackled. As one analyst commented, “A failure to
stabilize the market (indeed to achieve a notable recovery from current levels)
could lead to a crisis of confidence in the heretofore infallible state
apparatus.”
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au