Rebalancing China's Economy: Domestic and International Implications |
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Authors: | Guonan Ma Ivan Roberts Gerard Kelly |
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Affiliation: | 1. Adjunct Professor, City University of Hong Kong, China;2. Head of Asian Economies Research Unit, Economic GroupReserve Bank of Australia;3. Senior Analyst, Financial Markets GroupReserve Bank of Australia |
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Abstract: | This paper considers interactions between China's domestic and external imbalances and their global implications. We present scenarios detailing how a rebalancing of China's growth pattern from investment‐driven growth towards more consumption‐driven growth may occur in practice. Using input–output tables for 2012, we illustrate the knife‐edged nature of Chinese rebalancing, the linkages between expenditure‐side and production‐side rebalancing, and how an internal rebalancing could exacerbate external imbalances. A policy implication for China is that for rebalancing to be fast, consumption must be exceptionally resilient and the efficiency of investment must increase sharply. If rebalancing is too slow, the capital‐to‐output ratio will rise to potentially unsustainable levels and consumption will fail to attain levels of contemporary upper middle‐income economies by 2030. Global input–output tables (1995–2011) suggest that the patterns of Chinese rebalancing considered in our scenarios may generate substantial headwinds for exports to China by its trading partners. |
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Keywords: | China external rebalancing internal rebalancing E21 E22 O11 O53 |
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