Cover Story
  

A tale of two halves

Updated: 2011-07-29 11:57

By Andrew Moody (China Daily)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

Economy heading for a soft landing, but hard questions remain on the inflation front

A tale of two halves

Is the China economy heading for a hard or a soft landing?

Many of the recent indicators have presented a worrying picture. Manufacturing output, as measured by the Purchasing Managers' Index published by HSBC, fell this month to below the 50-mark (an indication of a contraction) to 48.9 from 50.1 in June. The official China figures have yet to be released.

Related: The realistic China growth scenario

Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, is still soaring ahead, fueled by higher food prices, reached 6.4 percent in June, a sharp rise from May's figure of 5.5 percent.

In a report in June by the National Audit Office, China's leading auditor, it emerged the local government sector, responsible for many of China's major infrastructure projects, was heavily in debt with borrowings of 10.7 trillion yuan (1.15 billion euros) in 2010, around a quarter of China's GDP.

The Chinese government has been trying to steer a soft landing after prime pumping the economy with 4 trillion yuan (450 billion euros), believed to be the largest economic stimulus packages in history, in the wake of the financial crisis.

Worried about over heating, it raised interest rates for a fifth time in eight months in July with one-year lending rates being upped by 25 basis points to 6.56 percent.

It has also implemented a serious of other credit-tightening measures. This has had the effect already of steadying growth, down from 9.7 percent in the first quarter to 9.5 percent in the three months to the end of June.

Economists are divided as to how successful the measures have been. The International Monetary Fund warned of the risk of the Chinese economy heading for "a hard landing that reverberates beyond China" earlier this month.

Experts give their predictions on a hard or soft

A tale of two halves
Robert Lawrence Kuhn, leading China commentator
 
"Reserves are still 50 percent greater than even the most extreme estimates of local government indebtedness."
 
Hard landing: 3
Soft landing: 7
 

A tale of two halves
Duncan Innes-Ker, senior economist, Economist Intelligence Unit, Beijing

"I would say that overall we are optimistic about the landing being quite soft."

Hard landing: 3 to 4 Soft landing: 6 to 7

A tale of two halves
Stefan Halper, senior research fellow at Magdalene College, Cambridge
 
"I don’t think the economy is going to collapse… but the near term is going to be difficult."
 
Hard landing: 6 to 7 Soft landing: 3 to 4
 
A tale of two halves
Donna Kwok, greater China economist at HSBC
 
"Any economy that is heading for a hard landing would not be growing at the trend rate."
 
Hard landing: 0 to 5 Soft landing: N/A
 
 

A tale of two halves
Michael Spence, professor at Stern School of Business, New York University and Nobel Prize winner

"It appears that China is steadily reining in infl ation and intervening to prevent excessive asset price rises in real estate markets."

Hard landing: 1 to 2 Soft landing: 8 to 9

A tale of two halves
George Magnus, senior economic adviser, UBS Investment Bank  

"In the end — and this may be in 2012 or 2013, maybe even later, I think there will be a hard landing, which will take the form of a good old fashioned investment bust."
 
Hard landing: 6.5 Soft landing: 3.5
 
A tale of two halves
Wang Jianmao, professor of economics at the China Europe International Business School
 
"The most risky and dangerous thing is that if you don’t know there is a danger."
 
Hard landing: 2 to 3 Soft landing: 7 to 8
 
 
 
 
 
 

   Previous Page 1 2 3 4 Next Page  

E-paper

Ringing success

Domestic firms make hay as shopping spree by middle class consumers keeps cash registers ringing in Nanjing

Mixed Results
 Crowning achievement
Living happily ever after

European Edition

Specials

Ciao, Yao

Yao Ming announced his retirement from basketball, staging an emotional end to a glorious career.

Going the distance

British fitness coach comes to terms with tragedy through life changes

Turning up the heat

Traditional Chinese medicine using moxa, or mugwort herb, is once again becoming fashionable

My China story
Home swede home
Setting the pace in Turkey