After the NPC: Xi Jinping’s Roadmap for China
Brookings Institution
By: Arthur R. Kroeber
Opinion | March, 2014
A year after he and his colleagues
took control of China’s government, Xi Jinping has emerged as an
extraordinarily powerful leader, with a clear and ambitious agenda for remaking
the Chinese governance system. Economic, social and foreign policy are now on a
far more clear and decisive course than they were during the drifting and
unfocused last years under president Hu Jintao and premier Wen Jiabao.
Xi arguably wields more personal authority than any Chinese leader since
Mao: he has subdued the fragmented fiefdoms that arose under Hu; has arrogated
all key decisions to himself, unlike Jiang Zemin who delegated much economic
policy power to his premier Zhu Rongji; and does not have to deal with the
cabal of conservative patriarchs that often hemmed in Deng Xiaoping.
Perhaps the biggest surprise of Xi’s first year was the speed with which
he consolidated his power and signaled his policy intentions. He achieved this
through two big house-cleaning drives. First was an anti-corruption campaign
that neutralized a powerful political enemy (former security boss Zhou
Yongkang), brought to heel a powerful vested interest (state oil giant China
National Petroleum Corporation, much of whose senior management was arrested)
and signaled the costs of opposing his reform agenda by sweeping up 20,000
officials at all levels of government. The other was the so-called “mass line”
campaign that involved party, government and military officials engaging in
“self-criticism” sessions and getting marching orders from party central.
So there is no question that Xi has power. What does he intend to do
with it? The Decision document that emerged last November from the Communist
Party plenum made clear that his aim is comprehensive governance reform. This
does not mean eroding the party’s monopoly on power; quite the reverse. The
intention is to strengthen the party’s grip by improving the administrative
system, clarifying the roles of the market and the state (resulting in a more
market-driven economy but also in a more powerful and effective state), and
permitting a wider role for citizen-led non-governmental organizations—so long
as those NGOs effectively act as social-service contractors for the state and
do not engage in advocacy or political mobilization.
And at the recent National People’s Congress (NPC) we got additional
detail on Xi’s economic program, which is the most comprehensive structural
reform agenda since the late 1990s. (Xi’s propagandists make the bolder claim
that it is the most sweeping reform program since Deng’s original “reform and
opening” drive of the late 1970s.) Much commentary has focused on the Plenum
Decision’s emphasis on giving the market a “decisive role,” and this shift is
indeed important. But Xi is not some Chinese version of Ronald Reagan or
Margaret Thatcher: for him and his colleagues, the market is a tool, not an end
in itself. The respective roles of state and market need to be clarified, but
the state role will remain very large. Xi’s economic agenda is not just about
deregulation and improving the environment for private enterprise; it is also
about fixing the state-enterprise and fiscal systems so that they become more
effective instruments for achieving state aims.
Xi Jingping
If Xi succeeds, the result will be a China with a more efficient
economy, a better run and somewhat more transparent government—and a Communist
Party with enhanced legitimacy and tighter control of all the crucial levers of
power. But there are also two less rosy potential outcomes. One is that his
reforms fail, and China is left with a debt ridden, slow-growing economy with
an overbearing state sector and an increasingly dissatisfied population.
Another is that he succeeds—but either becomes a permanent dictator himself, or
establishes the belief that China only be ruled by a strongman, thereby
retarding the development of a more open and participatory political system.
It’s the economy, and we’re not stupid
On the immediate economic policy questions, a gulf has opened between
foreign and many non-official domestic analysts on the one hand, and the
apparent stance of the government on the other. According to the prevalent
outside view, China’s biggest problem is the huge increase in leverage since
the 2008 global financial crisis: total non-financial credit rose from 138
percent of GDP in 2008 to 205 percent last year. Unless this spiraling leverage
is brought under control, the argument goes, China risks some sort of financial
crisis. To stabilize the credit/GDP ratio, annual credit growth must fall from
its current rate of around 17 percent to the trend rate of nominal GDP growth,
which now appears to be around 10 percent. But such a dramatic fall in credit
growth must almost certainly cause a drop in real GDP growth, at least in the
short run. The conclusion is therefore that if Beijing is serious about
controlling leverage, it must accept significantly lower growth for at least a
couple of years. If on the other hand the leaders insist on keeping economic growth
at its current pace, this means they cannot be serious about controlling
leverage and imposing structural reform, and a train wreck is more likely.
As far as we can tell from the agenda laid out at the Plenum and the
NPC, Xi and his colleagues do not agree with this analysis. Their priorities
are to restructure the state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and the fiscal system,
and maintain real GDP growth at approximately its current rate of 7.5 percent.
The leverage problem, by implication, can be sorted out over several years.
The argument in favor of this approach is that SOE and fiscal reform
strike at the root causes of the debt build-up. Local governments have borrowed
because their expenditure responsibilities exceed their assigned revenues, they
have an implicit mandate to build huge amounts of urban infrastructure, and
they face no accountability for the return on their investments. SOEs have
borrowed because their return on capital has deteriorated sharply. Improving
SOEs’ return on capital and cleaning up local government finance, should
greatly reduce the demand for unproductive debt, and hence bring credit and
economic growth back into alignment—eventually. In the meantime credit will
flow at whatever rate permits real GDP to keep humming at 7 percent or more,
meaning that leverage will continue to rise.
In other words, the government thinks the debt build-up is merely a
symptom, and it intends to attack the underlying disease while letting the
symptoms take care of themselves. One can feel comfortable with approach this
on two conditions: first, that the government is right that the debt buildup
does not itself pose an immediate threat to economic health; and second that
the government is serious about tackling the structural problems.
Debt – what, me worry?
The safety of the current debt trajectory is a judgment call. On the
plus side, the last several months have seen a steep decline in year-on-year
credit growth, with very little apparent impact on economic activity. Growth in
broad credit (including activity in the “shadow” financing sector) peaked at
23.5 percent in April 2013 and declined continuously to 17 percent in February,
while GDP growth remained basically steady in both real and nominal terms. If
this pattern holds, it suggests that leverage will continue to increase, but at
a slower rate than in the past two years, so the runaway-train risk is reduced.
The government’s own case for the safety of the present debt situation
implicitly rests on a report by the National Audit Office (NAO) in late
December, which found the debt position of local governments to be poor but
manageable. Total liabilities of local governments as of 30 June 2013 were
found to be Rmb18 trn (US$3 trn), or approximately 31 percent of GDP; of these
liabilities 40 percent were guarantees and contingencies (and thereby not an
imminent risk to local finances). NAO’s estimate of consolidated public debt,
including the central government, came in at about 53 percent of GDP, well
below the levels of public borrowing in most OECD countries.
Another basis for the sanguine view on debt was an extensive national
balance-sheet analysis published in December by the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences (CASS), the party’s main think-tank. CASS’s calculation methods differ
from NAO’s, so the two sets of figures are not directly comparable. CASS found
that total government debt was 73 percent of GDP in 2011, and that broad
public-sector liabilities (including the debt of SOEs and policy banks) were
151 percent of GDP. This sounds scary until you inspect the asset side of the
balance sheet, which comes in at a more cheerful 350 percent. This figure is almost
certainly too rosy: nearly three-quarters of it represents the land holdings of
local governments and SOE assets, whose reported values are probably well above
their true market values. But even discounting these values substantially, it
is still possible to conclude that the public sector’s assets comfortably cover
its liabilities.
Whether one agrees with these estimates or not, it is clear that policy
makers accept the central conclusion that the nation’s debt problem is serious
but manageable, and that direct efforts to deleverage immediately are not
warranted. The important question then becomes whether Beijing’s efforts to
tackle the underlying structural problems are bearing fruit.
Rolling back the SOE tide
So what are those efforts? The agenda on State Owned Enterprise (SOE) reform
is now clear. SOEs will be compelled to focus on improving their return on
capital, rather than expanding their assets; private capital will be permitted
to enter previously restricted sectors; direct private investment in SOEs and
in state-led investment projects will be encouraged; and most likely (although
government officials have been coy on this point), a swathe of underperforming
locally-controlled SOEs in non-strategic sectors will be privatized or forced
into bankruptcy.
In essence, this revives the zhuada fangxiao (grasp the big, release the
small) SOE reform strategy of the late 1990s. The idea was that the state would
retain control, and try to improve the operational efficiency, of a relatively
small number of very large enterprises in strategic sectors such as railways,
aviation, telecoms, power and petrochemicals, while privatizing most activity
in competitive consumer goods and services sectors. This strategy was
successful: in the decade ending in 2008, the number of SOEs fell from 260,000
to 110,000, the private sector’s share of national fixed investment rose from
less than a quarter to 58 percent, the profitability and return on assets of
state firms rose dramatically and came close to matching the returns in private
firms, and the proportion of SOE assets in “strategic” sectors rose to an
all-time high of 62 percent.
Thanks to the Hu/Wen leadership’s lack of enthusiasm for state sector
reform, and their mandate that state firms support the massive 2009 economic
stimulus, some of these gains have been reversed. Crucially, the return on
assets in SOEs plummeted to less than half the private-sector average, and
state firms began to re-colonize sectors from which they had previously
retreated: by 2011, half of SOE assets were in these non-strategic sectors.
Now the reformers are back in charge and aim to complete the zhuada
fangxiao objective. This does not mean eliminating the state sector, or
privatizing the core centrally-owned firms on the economy’s commanding heights.
But it does mean a determined push to shed non-core SOEs and assets, abandon
consumer-facing sectors in favor of private firms, and improve the operational
efficiency of the remaining SOES. The headline efforts in this direction so far
have been an announcement by the Guangdong provincial government that it aims
to move 80 percent of provincial SOEs to a mixed-ownership structure, with no
predetermined minimum state shareholding; and an announcement by petrochemicals
giant Sinopec that it will seek private investment for an up to 30 percent
share of its downstream gasoline and diesel distribution operations.
Funding the unfunded mandates
SOE reform was a surprisingly strong component of the Third Plenum
decision; fiscal reform took center stage in the recent NPC session. China’s
central fiscal problem is unfunded mandates for local governments. Localities
control less than half of revenues but are responsible for 85 percent of
government expenditure. In theory, the gap is supposed to be bridged by
transfers from the central government, but in practice the transfers often do
not match up well with localities’ actual needs. Not surprisingly, they respond
to this structural deficit by resorting to a variety of off-budget funding schemes,
a lot of which involve grabbing land and selling it to developers at a big
markup.
A mismatch between local expenditure and revenue was a deliberate
feature of the landmark 1994 tax reform (in whose design finance minister Lou
Jiwei was involved as a junior official). But until the early 2000s,
localities’ expenditure share was roughly stable at around two-thirds of the
total; unfunded mandates and chronic deficits have grown dramatically in the
past decade.
The centerpiece of Lou’s fiscal reform strategy is a recentralization of
expenditure responsibility and a more flexible transfer system, reducing
incentives for local-government rapacity. But in his budget speech he outlined
a host of other detailed reforms, whose combined effect would be curb over-investment
in real estate and heavy industry, permit fiscal policy to become more
countercyclical and increase budget accountability. The main items include:
- Revenue
estimates “are now seen as projections instead of tasks to accomplish.”
This aims to discourage the current practice of trying to increase tax
collections during economic downturns.
- Adoption
of a three-year budget cycle and accrual accounting.
- Increase
local government borrowing authority (from a small base), via provincial
and municipal bonds.
- Make
budgets at both the central and local level more open and transparent.
- Clean
up the maze of local government tax breaks.
- Impose the long-delayed tax on property values, establish an environmental protection tax and hike the resource tax on coal.
Good diagnosis, but will the cure cause more
harm?
All in all the reform agenda is a strong one: its diagnosis of China’s
economic ills is compelling, and the proposed cures seems sensible. There are
three concerns. First, there is the worry that the government has
underestimated the financial risks of the burgeoning debt burden and a
rapidly-changing financial system. The only clear promise of stronger financial
regulation so far is Lou’s statement that a deposit insurance system will be
launched later this year. This would reduce moral hazard by clarifying for
investors which financial assets are guaranteed and which are risky. But more
action to cut debt and restrain the “shadow banking” sector may be needed.
Second, it is possible that reforms may be thwarted by powerful
bureaucratic and business interests: some reforms (like the property tax) have
been proposed in the past but gone nowhere. On the whole, Xi’s success at
whipping officialdom into line by the anti-corruption and mass line campaigns suggests
he will be more effective than his predecessor, but there is no guarantee.
Finally, there is the worry that Xi’s program succeeds, and validates highly
centralized and authoritarian style of governance that could harm China’s
long-term prospects for development into a more open and liberal society.




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