HomeNewsOpinionChina’s magical growth of 5.3 percent has puzzled the Chinese

China’s magical growth of 5.3 percent has puzzled the Chinese

Strong first-quarter numbers are puzzling the Chinese, who witness a stagnant economy daily. Two factors reconcile the difference

April 18, 2024 / 15:03 IST
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China, economy,
As China undergoes structural transitions, it’s becoming harder to read the economy and figure out when and where it bottoms.

China’s first-quarter 5.3 percent growth handily beat expectations and Beijing’s own target of “around 5 percent.” But if you ask households, companies and even the taxman, the reality on the ground feels a lot less rosy.

By the end of 2023, only 9.5 percent saw good job prospects, according to the central bank’s latest urban depositor survey. Preparing for rainy days, households added 8.6 trillion yuan ($1.2 trillion) in their savings in the first quarter, prompting some banks to discontinue long-term fixed-income offerings to protect their margins. The CSI 2000 Index, whose small-cap companies are more sensitive to business cycles, is down 20 percent for the year. Meanwhile, as of February, government fiscal revenue fell 2.3 percent from a year ago.

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Accusations that China is cooking its economic-expansion statistics have been around for decades. But to understand its economy and political system better, one should try to reconcile and make sense of the difference between the headline number and people’s daily perceptions. As far as I can see, two forces are at play.

First, the economy is experiencing its longest deflationary streak since 1999. As such, the 5.3 percent increase in real gross domestic product doesn’t offer useful insights into stagnant income growth experienced by workers and corporations, whose earnings are in yuan terms. Indeed, in the first quarter, nominal GDP notched only 4.2 percent. Household disposable income increased by 6.2 percent, well below pre-pandemic levels.