Advisor blames government spending for weak demand
An influential policy advisor blames slowing government spending in Q2 for weaker economic growth.
According to Zhang Bin, a deputy director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, China’s leading think tank:
- “The decline in demand…is not from private sector consumption and investment, but from the slowdown in the growth of broad fiscal expenditure.”
- “The main reason may be the decline in local governments’ financial strength.”
Zhang said that in Q2:
- Local government financing vehicles (LGFVs) issued RMB 405.7 billion less in bonds and borrowed RMB 380 billion less in bank loans y/y
- Land sales – a key source of local government revenue – were down RMB 330.6 billion y/y
- Local governments issued RMB 376.1 billion fewer special purpose bonds (SPBs) y/y
Additionally, local governments’ fiscal revenue rose only 0.5% from January to May, down from 1% from January to March.
Zhang says local governments have tried to compensate by increasing non-tax revenues – like fines and fees – and by not paying their bills.
- “These factors have put the business environment under greater pressure.”
Zhang didn’t have a figure for Q2 government expenditure but said state spending from January to May contracted 2.2% y/y.
Get smart: The central government has ramped up its own borrowing since Q4, but this has fallen well short of what’s needed.
Our take: China relies increasingly on exports to keep its factories humming – a tenuous position given deteriorating geopolitical conditions.
- Beijing needs to borrow more soon to put the economy on a more sustainable footing.