Economy

How A Chinese Economic Crisis Would Unfold

As reported on Businessinsider.com

by Mamta Badkar

Improving Chinese economic data have many experts saying that the economy has bottomed out, and that the possibility of a hard economic landing is off the table.

Societe Generale analysts expect Chinese GDP to increase 7.4 percent this year but think there still is a “non-negligible risk” of a hard landing in which GDP growth falls to less than six percent. Remember a hard landing refers to four consecutive quarters of below six percent growth – which is the minimum needed for a stable job market and to avoid “systemic financial risk”.

In a new report titled “What If China Lands Hard?” SocGen’s China economist Wei Yao writes that clients they surveyed expect growth of between 5.5 – 7.0 percent in the worst reasonable case.  Yao thinks it could drop much lower to about 4 percent.

So what would could cause a hard landing? According to Yao, a major trade shock, inadequate government investment from Beijing, or a sharp property market correction prompted by tight policies could all send China’s economy spiralling.

And how would this scenario play out? From Yao:

“Whatever the catalyst, the excess capacity in the manufacturing sector – estimated at 40% in 2011 by the IMF – would be exacerbated by a sharp growth slowdown. This would cut corporate margins sharply, making profits plunge, and triggering a downward spiral in domestic demand. Bankruptcies and unemployment would occur on a large scale, endangering financial and social stability.

One factor that could accelerate the downward spiral is the high leverage of China’s corporate sector, which exceeded 120% of GDP at end-2011 and has kept rising throughout 2012. As the crisis progressed, non-performing loans would undoubtedly rise beyond the capacity of local governments to contain them, as their fiscal resources dwindled.

Even in China’s (semi-) controlled system, banks could choose to freeze lending as a knee-jerk reaction, while the authorities rushed to draft a decisive response. The rapid development of the non-bank credit market in the last few years, especially shadow banking activities, has created a new vector through which a systemic liquidity crunch could take place. Capital outflow would likely ensue, stretching domestic liquidity conditions further.”

Here’s Yao’s chart:

 

china hard landing chart

Societe Generale