HomeNewsOpinionXi Jinping’s supply-side panacea has lost its magic

Xi Jinping’s supply-side panacea has lost its magic

Three reasons why an old solution to rein in industrial excess capacity won’t work again

August 21, 2024 / 16:07 IST
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Xi Jinping
The government can’t really tell entrepreneurs what to do, unless Xi is prepared to return to the old days of a command economy.

Many are worried that China is making way more than the world needs. From electric vehicles to solar panels, plunging prices at home and abroad are igniting a new round of trade wars. Even Beijing is concerned: In a top-level meeting late last month, policymakers pledged to curb “vicious competition” among businesses.

Industrial overcapacity has flared up in recent months. There isn’t enough global demand to absorb all the lithium batteries, solar modules or steel that Chinese factories can produce. But this is happening at the painful expense of corporate profits. More than half of industry supply in solar, EV, steel, and construction machinery isn’t making money, a sharp deterioration from a year earlier, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Even those producing consumer staples are not spared. Fresh milk, for instance, is caught in its longest price slump in 14 years, exacerbating a deflationary gloom that’s enveloping the economy.

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We’ve been here before. China went through an extended producers’ deflation between 2012 and 2016, caused by the same problem. As the economy slowed, the utilization rate in the steel and coal industries contracted from 79% and 90% in 2010 to 70% and 65% in 2015, according to the International Monetary Fund. Back then, excess capacity was also an international issue. About half of the anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations against China in 2016 were related to steel.

President Xi Jinping’s solution then was a supply-side reform that aimed to rein in production. Starting in 2015, the government closed factories and deployed 100 billion yuan ($14 billion) for severance pay to steel and coal workers. It was a success. By 2017, deflation was gone, and some big state-owned enterprises, such as Aluminum Corporation of China Ltd., swung to profit.