China's record first quarter fuels strong expansion in 2021
Economics / China Economy Apr 22, 2021 - 11:47 AM GMTBy: Dan_Steinbock
	 China’s  1st quarter record performance will accelerate momentum in China and  support recovery in the US and global economic prospects – as long as  unwarranted geopolitical tensions remain in check.
	
  China’s  1st quarter record performance will accelerate momentum in China and  support recovery in the US and global economic prospects – as long as  unwarranted geopolitical tensions remain in check.
A  year ago, China’s first quarter plunge was -6.8 percent, due to the pandemic  effect. In the West, it was widely seen as the “end of China's growth story.” 
Instead,  in early February 2020 I predicted a turnaround in the increase of new virus cases in China, with  the beginning of the economic rebound in the second quarter. Following the 6.5  percent expansion in the fourth quarter of 2020, the GDP rose to a record 18.3  percent year-on-year in the past quarter. 
Obviously,  the performance benefited from the base effect, due to the pandemic plunge a  year ago. Nonetheless, it reflects a strong impetus for normalization. 
 
Expansive  momentum from  manufacturing to services          
  
  The  strategic rebound effort began with supply-side expansion. Now it is broadening,  thanks to improving domestic demand and higher exports. 
  All  major indicators are already above the pre-crisis level. The Purchasing  Managers’ Index (PMI) has grown 13 months in a row. Production of machineries  and health care-related products continue to show strong growth. 
  As  the supply-side performance is driving turnaround in consumption, even the  services PMI has been expanding almost a year.
  With  the easing of social distancing, retail sales, which have been expanding for 8  months, are likely to strengthen. Due to new variants and lingering pandemic waves  in many parts of the world, international travel restrictions are likely to  foster domestic spending in the Chinese  mainland.
After  the severe pandemic-induced economic plunge, the international auto sector is  recovering with US retail sales at 26 percent in the first quarter. However, China’s  auto production has increased for 12 months at over 40 percent year-on-year. 
Exaggerated  concerns over  monetary  tightening 
  
  Last  year, Chinese performance relied on fiscal and monetary support, while a surge  of debt sparked unease among some observers. With recovery, government  authorities have urged banks to shun disproportionate lending growth.
  Nonetheless,  concerns over monetary tightening seem overblown. 
  In  line with its normalization objectives, China’s central bank seeks to cool  credit growth to preempt debt and financial risks. But it is moving cautiously  not to disrupt the recovery.
  Moreover,  inflation has strengthened and been in positive territory since March. 
Furthermore,  China’s gradual financial integration with the global markets is supporting its  domestic momentum. 
Chinese  government bonds   attract diversifying foreign investors
  
  In  particular, Chinese government bonds (CGBs) are growing in popularity across  global fixed income portfolios. In just two years, foreign holdings of CGBs  have nearly doubled to almost $310 billion.  
  Despite  US government’s efforts at China’s geopolitical containment, US investors seek steadiness  and diversification through CGBs’ high and stable yield. Chinese 10-year bonds  have yields over 3.2%, while the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield is at 1.7%. 
  And  this is just a prelude. Over the next 20 months, more than 360 onshore Chinese  bonds will be added to major investment indexes tracked by global investors. The  full inclusion is projected to attract around $150 billion of foreign inflows  into China’s $13 trillion bond market; the third-largest in the world after the  U.S. and Japan. 
The  huge inflows will support the yuan, even as China’s current account surplus is  shrinking.
From  exports and investment to  innovation and consumption  
  
  With  increasing investment by both private and state-owned enterprises, public  investment will rise faster, thanks to the push under the 14th Five  Year Plan. 
  Gradually,  that investment will shift from manufacturing and real estate, which fueled China’s  old growth model, toward research and development (R&D), as the new growth  model takes hold. The latter, in turn, is accelerating, thanks to the rapid  expansion of China’s Silicon Valley; the Greater Bay Area across Guangdong, Hong  Kong, and Macao. 
  As  China has begun the transition to higher value-added, parts of the cost-focused  supply-chains in the Chinese mainland are relocating to Southeast Asia. 
That  is likely to boost regional integration under the Regional Comprehensive  Economic Partnership (RCEP), which is a market-led regional win-win for  economic development – despite ongoing geopolitical attempts to split Asia.
Global  recovery or worldwide  divisions  
  The  key international uncertainty involves the question whether the US will put  global interdependency – cooperation in climate change and international  trade and investment - ahead the divide-and-rule geopolitics against multiple  major economies. 
  The  implications will not reverberate only outside America.
  Economic  instability and geopolitical tensions have potential to derail the Biden  administration’s own domestic programs, which rely on huge debt-taking,  multi-trillion-dollar stimulus packages, continual monetary easing; and what Democratic  economist Paul Krugman has termed “super-core inflation amid a year of  bottlenecks and blips.” 
  With  progressive normalization and relative international stability, China’s expansion  momentum will steady toward the end of the year, while the strong rebound will  allow it to exceed the 2021 growth target of “above 6 percent.” 
  Even  with moderation, growth is likely to exceed 6.5 percent and has potential up to  8.5 to 9.5 percent in 2021, with likely deceleration 6 percent or so in 2022. 
Assuming  peaceful evolution in Asia Pacific, China’s GDP is on track to surpass the US  as the world’s largest economy in the late 2020s. That’s not away from the US. Thanks  to global interdependency, such expansion can support both US and global  economic prospects.
Dr. Dan Steinbock is the founder of Difference Group and has served at the India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institute for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see http://www.differencegroup.net/
© 2021 Copyright Dan Steinbock - All Rights Reserved
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