By Clyde Prestowitz
As China prepares
for a momentous change of leadership at the top, a question increasingly being
posed is how the new leaders will guide a country that will soon be the world's
largest economy. That the Chinese economy will reach the top rung sometime
between now (some economists believe it already is the biggest economy) and the
early 2020s is assumed as part of the conventional wisdom, having been
confidently predicted by such influential voices as the International Monetary
Fund, the Economist magazine,
and virtually all of the leading pundits both in the West and in Asia.
So it was fascinating last week for me
to meet with one of Beijing's top economists who says "it's never going to
happen." Because this analyst requested anonymity, I cannot reveal who it
is which I believe is itself a commentary on some of the reasons why it may not
happen. Nevertheless, the substance and logic of the analysts argument is
compelling and important.
The first point is that the Chinese
economy today is not, as is commonly stated, half that of the U.S. economy.
Rather it is only about a third the size of the U.S. GDP. This is because a lot
of the growth of the past was accomplished by building stuff that will never be
used sufficiently to justify its cost and should thus represent negative growth
if it were correctly counted.
This should show up as non performing
loans whose liquidation should have been subtracted from GDP. But since they
were not officially recognized they were not subtracted and will thus
eventually show up as negative growth in the future as resources are used to
service them.
This does not include environmental
degradation which one Chinese economist estimates should have reduced China's
reported GDP by 10-20 percent but was not reported to have done so. However, it
will show up in the future as rivers and farmland produce less and as health
care costs and sick workers eat up more and more of the nation's wealth
Most orthodox observers think that China
has four times the U.S. population and about half its GDP. China's productivity
is about an eighth that of the United States. So if China doubles its
productivity, it would equal the U.S. GDP while still having only half the
productivity of the United States. That appears to be a mathematical certainty
for China, and thus the conventional analysts hold to the conventional
prediction of China soon becoming the world's top economy.
However, there is a weakness in this
analysis. It focuses on the wrong demographics. It's not population size that
counts with regard to GDP. Rather it's the size of the working population.
China now has five times as many workers as the United States, but that will
drop to only three times by 2050. That means that Chinese workers must increase
their productivity from one tenth of U.S. productivity to one third. In other
words, instead of doubling productivity they would have to triple it. Indeed,
if you believe that the size of the Chinese GDP is over-stated, then current
productivity is also overstated. So, maybe Chinese workers would have to
quadruple their productivity in order for the Chinese GDP to equal the U.S.
GDP.
That is a much higher hurdle that my
economist friend in China doesn't think the Chinese workers will ever be able
to clear.
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