China Research

A discussion forum on emerging markets, mainly China – from a macro, micro, institutional and corporate angle.

Summer news from China – how strong are SoEs in reality?

August 30, 2017

Back from a long summer vacation, I have indeed a feeling that I missed a lot of interesting news about China. In an attempt to catch up with my information deficit, I found some striking news. Let me mention a few.

1. GDP remains at its ( easily) predictable growth path

GDP growth for the second quarter came in at 6.9 percent (yoy). Some Western analysts claimed that this was higher than expected. However, what are these small deviations from expectations really worth when we simultaneously know that Chinese GDP statistics hardly fluctuate and regularly land in line with forecasts and objectives of the politicians and government authorities?

There is no doubt that the official growth objective for 2017 will be met (“6.5 percent or somewhat more”) – particularly in the light of this fall’s Party Congress. No major (economic) accidents are “allowed” to happen any time soon.

Probably five new members of the the so-called Standing Committee will be appointed during the Party Congress to join the only continuing top leaders of the current Standing Committee, i. e. President Xi Jinping and Prime Minister Li Keqiang. It is important to keep in mind that the Standing Committee clearly must be regarded as the most important decision-making institution in China.

Thus, the importance of this forthcoming event in – presumably – October should not be underestimated. The future of the economic reform process will to a high extent depend on the new names in the Standing Committee and their relations to Xi and Li .

2. Strong rise of profits in state firms

According to the Ministry of Finance China’s state-owned enterprises (SoEs) increased their profits in the first half of 2017 by strong 23 percent due to “structural supply side reforms”. (Supply side policy means in China capacity adaptations – mostly reductions – and improved/new access to goods and services. In our part of the world, however, we see supply policy more aiming at more fundamental, growth-supporting structural conditions for private households, companies and governments).

However, China’s has already decided on an ambitious strategy for SoEs but as late as during the so-called Third Plenum in fall 2013. Thus, the above-mentioned remarkable increase of profits should have come after only 2 1/2-3 years of structural changes – if we trust the calculations. Is there reason to do so? Some doubts are probably motivated – despite the obvious downsizing of particularly not really competitive exporting SoEs.

3. New China-Europe transport links

Really amazing news was the message about the introduction of the freight train service between Zhengzhou (Henan province) and Munich. This can be regarded as another little step toward the verification of the so-called Belt and Road initiative, an extremly ambitious China-led project aiming at the support of transports and economic growth between China and as far as to Western Europe.

While reading the article about this issue, I unfortunately got my doubts again about the quality of economic information.

Nothing very serious – but one has to wonder how the reporting Chinese agency can put together a description like this in the same article: “Munich is renowned for its auto industry and is home to brands such as BMW, Porsche, Mercedes Benz, and Bosch.”

However, all the three latter companies have their main offices in Stuttgart. This is not really a secret.

4. Surprising expansion of Huawei

In the first half of 2017, the major Chinese cell-phone producer Huawei achieved more or less the same market share as the pioneers of Apple. This is a surprising development – at least in my eyes.

We have to learn and to accept that China increasingly will surprise with globally successful companies – even if it still is hard to predict the velocity of such a development. But ears and eyes should be kept open.

 

Hubert Fromlet
Affiliate Professor at the School of Business and Economics, Linnaeus University
Editorial board

 

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The impact of China’s new economic policy on corporations

August 8, 2017

Here we have a topic I frequently use to discuss with students and companies. Two factors play in this context a decisive role for the corporate sector: the geographical location of the headquarters (home country) and the volume of activities.

If we concentrate the answer on a non-Chinese and probably not very small company, the following areas or departments of the company may feel or will/may be affected by the results of the new economic policy (if business with China is not too limited): strategy, sales (marketing), purchasing, product development, production, finance, human capital formation, investor relations, etc., i.e. major parts of the company in the case of quite extensive business with China. However, smaller foreign companies with more limited commercial relations to China may be affected by China’s economic reform policy as well.

The composition of Chinese imports from the developed world will in the future change a lot compared to the past two or three decades – the demand patterns of the young and urban population included. The application of digitalization will certainly increase rapidly in the – so far – second largest economy in the world. Digitalization will also affect many production processes. China wants to establish itself as a technological and an economic superpower – and means it seriously.

Consequently, many foreign companies will be forced to develop new business models and/or products for China. In certain cases may, for example, even future or potential reforms of the Chinese tax and fee system or educational reforms become parameters of interest for Western corporations.

It should be added that also many Chinese companies will have to change their business models, either to maintain current good positions, to expand in the future or in order to survive. This angle should not be neglected – and it will also affect purchasing managers in OECD countries. Competition within China will increase, too.

More could be mentioned. The objective of this little article is not to give a comprehensive answer to all possible effects of China’s new economic policy on corporate strategies and decisions in the rest of the world – but to indicate that there will be effects.

However, all the different kinds and volumes of these reform effects cannot be singled out today. More hints may come from the – probably – five new members of the Politburo’s Standing Committee. They will be selected at the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China this coming fall.

Do not hesitate to continuously watch political developments in China. The link to business with China is obvious and will become increasingly important!

 

Hubert Fromlet
Affiliate Professor at the School of Business and Economics, Linnaeus University
Editorial board

 

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Hernando de Soto – institutions mean a lot

July 13, 2017

Hernando de Soto, president of the Institute for Liberty and Democracy in Lima/Peru, received in spring 2017 the prestigious Swedish “Global Award for Entrepreneurship Research”. According to the price committee, de Soto’s analyses have led to “new ways to alleviate poverty and underdevelopment by reforming property right systems, business legislation and regulations. His contributions have

¤ led to a new and better understanding of the role of institutions for entrepreneurship, especially in developing countries;

¤ influenced policy worldwide, both in terms of conceptual understanding and practical policy measures;

¤ paved new ways to assess and measure how difficult it is for people to enter the formal sectors – this has been done by painstaking empirical field work;

¤ shown that the main problem in many developing countries is not capital per se but lack of property rights.”

By analyzing de Soto’s research, one can easily recognize the influence of his microeconomic work on the creation of the World Bank’s annual report “Doing Business”, dealing with institutional conditions in a large number of countries and – hopefully – improvements more recently. I regularly discuss the tables in “Doing Business” with my students – a statistical framework from the real world that easily explains what microeconomic and institutional economics (property rights) are all about. However, it should be reminded that well-working institutions alone cannot take lagging countries out of poverty.

Many friends in or of the emerging/developing world do hope that Hernando de Soto pretty soon will also receive what I here may call the Nobel Prize in Economics (officially: The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel). This would be a good and courageous choice – as courageous as giving it to other prominent economists with similar research interests. One may hereby mention, for example, relatively young development economists like Esther Duflo and Daron Acemoglu (why not all three jointly?).

Such a courageous step could mean real encouragement for all poor and underperforming countries and the necessary research on their current conditions and the way to a better future. Combatting poverty – and the environment – should become even more important objectives for the whole globe. Not only for politics but also for research!

 

Hubert Fromlet
Affiliate Professor at the School of Business and Economics, Linnaeus University
Editorial board

 

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