Foreign Policy in Focus - A Think Tank Without Walls
Foreign Policy In Focus

FPIF Column

Chain-Gang Economics

Walden Bello | October 30, 2006

Editor: John Feffer, IRC

Email this page to a friend

Comment on this article

Foreign Policy In Focus

“The world is investing too little,” according to one prominent economist. “The current situation has its roots in a series of crises over the last decade that were caused by excessive investment, such as the Japanese asset bubble, the crises in Emerging Asia and Latin America, and most recently, the IT bubble. Investment has fallen off sharply since, with only very cautious recovery.”

These are not the words of a Marxist economist describing the crisis of overproduction but those of Raghuram Rajan, the new chief economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). His analysis, now over a year old, continues to be accurate. Global overcapacity has made further investment simply unprofitable, which significantly dampens global economic growth. In Europe, for instance, GDP growth has averaged only 1.45% in the last few years. Global demand has not kept up with global productive capacity. And if countries are not investing in their economic futures, then growth will continue to stagnate and possibly lead to a global recession.

China and the United States, however, appear to be bucking the trend. But rather than signs of health, growth in these two economies—and their ever more symbiotic relationship with each other—may actually be indicators of crisis. The centrality of the United States to both global growth and global crisis is well known. What is new is China's critical role. Once regarded as the greatest achievement of this era of globalization, China's integration into the global economy is, according to an excellent analysis by political economist Ho-Fung Hung, emerging as a central cause of global capitalism's crisis of overproduction.1

China and the Crisis of Overproduction

China's 8-10% annual growth rate has probably been the principal stimulus of growth in the world economy in the last decade. Chinese imports, for instance, helped to end Japan's decade-long stagnation in 2003. To satisfy China's thirst for capital and technology-intensive goods, Japanese exports shot up by a record 44%, or $60 billion. Indeed, China became the main destination for Asia's exports, accounting for 31% while Japan's share dropped from 20% to 10%. China is now the overwhelming driver of export growth in Taiwan and the Philippines, and the majority buyer of products from Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, and Australia.

At the same time, China became a central contributor to the crisis of global overcapacity. Even as investment declined sharply in many economies in response to the surfeit of productive capacity, particularly in Japan and other East Asian economies, it increased at a breakneck pace in China. Investment in China was not just the obverse of disinvestment elsewhere, although the shutting down of facilities and sloughing off of labor was significant not only in Japan and the United States but in the countries on China's periphery like the Philippines, Thailand, and Malaysia. China was significantly beefing up its industrial capacity and not simply absorbing capacity eliminated elsewhere. At the same time, the ability of the Chinese market to absorb its own industrial output was limited.

Agents of Overinvestment

A major actor in overinvestment was transnational capital. In the late 1980s and 90s, transnational corporations (TNCs) saw China as the last frontier, the unlimited market that could endlessly absorb investment and endlessly throw off profitable returns. However, China's restrictive rules on trade and investment forced TNCs to locate most of their production processes in the country instead of outsourcing only selected numbers of them. Analysts termed such TNC production activities “excessive internalization.” By playing according to China's rules, TNCs ended up overinvesting in the country and building up a manufacturing base that produced more than China or even the rest of the world could consume.

By the turn of the millennium, the dream of exploiting a limitless market had vanished. Foreign companies headed for China not so much to sell to millions of newly prosperous Chinese customers but rather to make China a manufacturing base for global markets and take advantage of its inexhaustible supply of cheap labor. Typical of companies that found themselves in this quandary was Philips, the Dutch electronics manufacturer. Philips operates 23 factories in China and produces about $5 billion worth of goods, but two-thirds of their production is exported to other countries.

The other set of actors promoting overcapacity were local governments investing in and building up key industries. While these efforts are often “well planned and executed at the local level,” notes Ho-Fung Hung, “the totality of these efforts combined … entail anarchic competition among localities, resulting in uncoordinated construction of redundant production capacity and infrastructure.”

As a result, idle capacity in such key sectors as steel, automobile, cement, aluminum, and real estate has been soaring since the mid-1990s, with estimates that over 75% of China's industries are currently plagued by overcapacity and that fixed asset investments in industries already experiencing overinvestment account for 40-50% of China's GDP growth in 2005. China's State Development and Reform Commission projects that the automobile industry will produce double what the market can absorb by 2010. The impact on profitability is not to be underestimated if we are to believe government statistics: at the end of 2005, Hung points out, the average annual profit growth rate of all major enterprises had plunged by half and the total deficit of losing enterprises had increased sharply by 57.6%.

The Low-Wage Strategy

The Chinese government can mitigate excess capacity by expanding people's purchasing power via a policy of income and asset redistribution. Doing so would probably mean slower growth but more domestic and global stability. This is what China's so-called New Left intellectuals and policy analysts have been advising. China's authorities, however, have apparently chosen to continue the old strategy of dominating world markets by exploiting the country's cheap labor. Although China's population is 1.3 billion, 700 million people—or over half—live in the countryside and earn an average of just $285 a year, according to some estimates. This reserve army of rural poor has enabled manufacturers, both foreign and local, to keep wages down.

Aside from the potentially destabilizing political effects of regressive income distribution, this low-wage strategy, as Hung points out, “impedes the growth of consumption relative to the phenomenal economic expansion and great leap of investment.” In other words, the global crisis of overproduction will worsen as China continues to dump its industrial production on global markets constrained by slow growth.

Vicious Cycle

Chinese production and American consumption are like the proverbial prisoners who seek to break free from one another but can't because they're chained together. This relationship is increasingly taking the form of a vicious cycle. On the one hand, China's breakneck growth has increasingly depended on the ability of American consumers to continue their consumption of much of the output of China's production brought about by excessive investment. On the other hand, America's high consumption rate depends on Beijing's lending the U.S. private and public sectors a significant portion of the trillion-plus dollars it has accumulated over the last decade from its yawning trade surplus with Washington.

This chain-gang relationship, says the IMF's Rajan, is “unsustainable.” Both the United States and the IMF have decried what they call “global macroeconomic imbalances” and called on China to revalue the renminbi to reduce its trade surplus with the United States. Yet China can't really abandon its cheap currency policy. Along with cheap labor, cheap currency is part of China's successful formula of export-oriented production. And the United States really can't afford to be too tough on China since it depends on that open line of credit to Beijing to continue feeding the middle-class spending that sustains its own economic growth.

The IMF ascribes this state of affairs to “macroeconomic imbalances.” But it's really a crisis of overproduction. Thanks to Chinese factories and American consumers, the crisis is likely to get worse.

End Notes

  1. Ho-Fung Hung, “Rise of China and the Global Overaccumulation Crisis,” paper presented at the Global Division of the Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Social Problems,” August 10-12, 2006, Montreal, Canada. A revised version of this paper will soon be published in a leading international relations journal.

FPIF columnist Walden Bello is executive director of Focus on the Global South and professor of sociology at the University of the Philippines. This article is based on work done for the Nautilus Institute’s China Project.

 

Subscribe to
World Beat

FPIF's weekly ezine


Support FPIF


Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Walden Bello, "Chain-Gang Economics" (Silver City, NM and Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, October 30, 2006).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/3650

Production Information:
Author(s): Walden Bello
Editor(s): John Feffer, IRC
Production: Chellee Chase-Saiz, IRC

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name Edward M. Graham Date: Nov 01, 2006
The current circumstances whereby China produces more than it can consume but the United States consumes more than it produces doubtlessly does lead to an unsustainable imbalance, as Walden Bello, citing Raghuram Rajan, notes. Not all economists believe that this imbalance is in fact unsustainable; there are respected analysts (Richard Cooper at Harvard, for example) who believe that the imbalance can be sustained into the indefinite future with no harm being done.

However, no matter who is right on this matter, Waldo Bello is wrong on a matter of nuance. He seems to argue that the imbalance is caused by overinvestment by TNCs (transnational corporations) operating in China. But foreign-invested firms, according to China's statistics, account for only 5.25% of total Chinese fixed investment. These firms do account, to be sure, for a disproportionately large share of China's exports (about 50%), but investment by these firms for the most part is in efficient operations in sectors where there is no overcapacity. Thus, of the sectors listed by Bello where overcapacity is asserted to exist -- these sectors are steel, automobiles, cement, aluminum, and real estate -- all but the second are dominated not by foreign-invested firms but by domestic Chinese firms. Moreover, state-owned firms in China account for more than 33% of all capital formation there, a percent that is much larger than the role of these firms in the overall economy. The one sector listed above marked by overcapacity that is dominated by foreign-invested firms is not, unlike most sectors in which foreign-invested firms dominate, export-oriented. Thus far, China is not a major exporter of cars.

Thus, there might indeed be a problem of overinvestment in China, but this overinvestment is not, by and large, happening in those sectors dominated by foreign-invested firms. Moreover, if the phenomenon "China produces more than it can consume, but the U.S. consumes more than it produces" might indeed lead to a global imbalance that is unsustainable, albeit the sustainability is debatable. But these two problems would not seem to be linked.

Name malek Date: Jan 22, 2007
I need to know how U.S monetary policy affects countries that pegged their currencies to the U.S dollar
Discussion for this article has been closed.
 
Contact FPIF's webmaster with inquiries regarding the functionality of this website.
Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.
 

Support FPIF

You Might Also Like:
 

Related Coverage of Asia/Pacific

Why the Afghan Surge Will Fail
Nov 12, 2009

'Legitimacy' in Afghanistan
Nov 12, 2009

North Korea: Journalists vs. Diplomats
Nov 9, 2009

Related Coverage of Financial Flows

Pranksters Fixing the World
Oct 21, 2009

The Virtues of Deglobalization
Sep 3, 2009

Multilateral Money
Aug 25, 2009