CONSUMPTION CONUNDRUM
Unwanted as it is, the world financial crisis
provides an opportunity to accelerate China's transition to a new growth pattern
driven by domestic consumption, says Tang.
More service-oriented, domestic demand-led and
labor-intensive urban growth could help make the economy less reliant on energy,
challenging to the environment and unequal to urban and rural areas, Kuijs says.
Their views are shared by China's leaders, who made
domestic consumption and economic transformation priorities in their 2006-2010
plan.
The state rolled out rural and urban health
protection plans and offered rural children free education to junior high
school.
It also set up goals of cutting energy use per unit
of output by 20 percent and major pollutant emissions by 10 percent by 2010.
Kuijs has seen "impressive policy actions", but "not
yet a decisive move toward rebalancing the economy" halfway into the five-year
plan.
Meeting the five-year energy efficiency target is
deemed crucial to rebalance the economy, but only a quarter of the planned
reduction has been completed in the past two years.
More is needed and the government could take
important steps in the area of pricing energy, land and environmental impact as
well as fiscal policies to move more boldly in that direction, says Kuijs.
Economist Wang Xiaoguang wants to see greater efforts
to move labor-intensive, export-oriented industries from the eastern and
southern coastal areas to the hinterland.
He advises restraining development of the property
sector, saying this could encourage investment in technological innovation and
energy conservation and generate higher profits.
"Only by cooling the housing market can China unleash
consumption demand as most household spending goes to home-buying," says Wang.
Meanwhile, the government turned to the vast rural market, which has 55 percent of the nation's consumers. A key meeting held by the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee from Thursday to Sunday discussed rural land reforms in a bid to spur the rural economy and consumption to offset the world economic slowdown.
MARATHON GAME
"It's an uneasy process," said Kuijs, referring to
China's bid to rebalance the economy. "A key challenge for the policy-makers at
the moment is to decide if and when China should pursue mildly stimulating, or
more than mildly stimulating macro-economic polices, based on considering how
the growth momentum is proceeding."
Another dilemma involved balancing the interests of
overall economic development as opposed to those of particular groups, a
worldwide issue.
"China is lucky that its government tends to have
this forward-looking vision usually and is able to decide what's good and what
are the policies needed to make sure that it continues to move in the right
direction," he says.
China's gradual approach to reforms and effective
incentive systems for local governments had contributed to the country's
profound economic achievements and will continue to play a role in future
reforms.
Kuijs says World Bank research suggests that by
improving technology and productivity, China can still have decent growth
without unilaterally relying on capital and human-intensive growth.
Meanwhile, industry and investment will continue to
be important in coming decades, he adds.
Economists seem to have confidence in China's
performance amid the global uncertainty.
Tang predicts that with proper, timely reactions,
China will experience one or two years, at most three to five years, of economic
correction, with a slowdown in annual output, but still be above 8 percent.
Nobel economics laureate Robert A. Mundell has
forecast China's economy will sustain growth above 8 percent for the next 15 to
20 years, predicting it will surpass Japan and the United States to become the
world's largest in 2050.
The growth rate means less to Wang, who stresses
China must first have a more balanced economic structure and better market
mechanism in the next 30 years.
"China's bid to achieve modernization is a marathon
game and now we are entering the last few kilometers," he says. "Now it's not
about speed but sustaining the advantage we have accumulated."