‘Is China’s economic growth at peak?’
Ira Singh
12 June’23
China, once considered the engine of global economic growth,is currently facing significant challenges that have raised concerns about a possible recession.As the braces for a potential global recession, many countries are looking to China, the world’s second largest economy,to play a significant role in mitigating the impact. However, economic experts express doubts that China will be able to rescue the global economy as it did during the 2008 financial crisis.
China’s imports contracted sharply in April by 7.9 per cent, while exports grew slower at 8.5 per cent compared to 14.8 per cent in March. Consumer prices rose at the slowest pace in more than two years in April, while factory gate deflation, prices offered by China’s industrial wholesalers, deepened, according to recent reports.Meanwhile, new bank loans tumbled far more sharply than expected in April, with lenders extending 718.8 billion yuan (USD 104 billion/EUR 94.5 billion) in new yuan loans in the month, less than a fifth of March’s tally.
China’s export oriented model has become more vulnerable due to rising protectionism and trade tensions with major economies like the United States.This has led China to pivot its economic strategy towards domestic consumption and reducing reliance on external demand.As a result China may priortize its domestic economy and stability over rescuing the global economy,as it seeks to address its own challenges and achieve sustainable growth.
In the recently concluded fiscal 2022-23, the US emerged as India’s largest trading partner for the second consecutive year. This is good news. India enjoys a healthy trade surplus with the world’s largest economy, meaning it exports to the US more than it imports. China remained India’s second-largest trading partner with merchandise trade worth $113.81 billion, a slight drop of 1.7% from 2021-22. The decline was due to a drop in export of goods from India to China and not vice versa. Already, India has a debilitating trade deficit with its northern neighbour. Last year, it increased to a record $83.2 billion after more than doubling in a decade from $36.2 billion 2013-14, according to reports.
Economic Slowdown in China:
China’s economy has been experiencing a deceleration in growth due to a combination of factors, including a shift towards a consumption- driven economy,a decline in export demand and structural challenges. Weakening industrial production, shrinking domestic demand and the ongoing debt burden have all contributed to the current economic predicament.
Impact on Indian economy:
China is a major trading partner for India,and any recessionary impact on the Chinese economy is likely to have repercussions for India.Reduced Chinese demand for Indian goods and services, particularly in sectors such as manufacturing, textiles and raw materials could dampen India’s export prospects and negatively affect its overall economic growth.Moreover, China’s economic downturn can disrupt global supply chains, affecting Indian businesses that rely on Chinese imports for raw materials, components,and machinery.Chinese economic recession can have broader regional implications, affecting economic dynamics and geopolitical relationships.It may also lead to decline in foreign direct investment (FDI) flows into the country.
Unlike the 2008 financial crisis , when China’s economic strength was relatively underestimated, the circumstances today influencing China’s limited capacity to rescue the global economy is the changing global economic landscape.Today the circumstances make it unlikely for China to replicate such a feat,as in 2008 financial crisis,to solely bear the burden of rescuing the global economy.