Thursday 6 June 2013

SLOW GROWTH IN CHINA

Forbes

CHINA'S SLOW GROWTH CAN BE GOOD NEWS

Junheng Li

Forbes, June 6, 2013

Over the past 33 years, China thrived on a singular economic model: high-volume manufacturing of low-margin products for the rest of world. Today, that growth model has stalled – and not just for cyclical or near team temporary reasons, but because it has come to the end of the line. That is evidenced by the excess capacity that has built up in many sectors such as steel, cement, solar panels and construction materials, as well as the rising cost structure, declining global competitiveness and shrinking corporate profitability of many Chinese companies.

According to a study by brokerage CLSA on 428 publicly traded Chinese companies (excluding banks), corporate margins have declined from approximately 30% in 1997 (before the Asian Financial Crisis) to 10.5% currently. A lack of R&D and innovation has hindered Chinese companies from moving up the value chain, and China is falling behind in global competitiveness. Many state-owned enterprises (SOEs), including state-owned banks, are kept afloat by taking on increasingly more debt from banks or from each other. Excluding banks, Chinese companies’ return on equity has declined by approximately 35%, while corporate leverage has increased approximately 33% since 1997.

The picture is clear. Despite its unprecedented achievement of lifting 500 million people out of poverty in as little as thirty-three years, China’s economy has become a prisoner of its own success.

(...) [article here]

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