BIZCHINA> Editor Choice
|
China's stimulus package: Will it work, and what's next?
(chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2008-11-26 10:28 Initially, the impact of the growing financial crisis on China was muted: China's banks had only minimal exposure to subprime losses. "Given that net exports account for about 20 percent of China's GDP, and that exports plus imports are as much as 70 percent of GDP, China is clearly not immune to the adverse impact of the current global financial crisis," says Wharton marketing professor John Zhang. "The slowdown in the Chinese economy partially reflects this impact." Manufacturers in China's export sector, already under pressure from the yuan's appreciation, rising costs and stricter enforcement of safety standards, have taken a heavy blow. Industries such as textiles, shoes and toys have been prone to widespread factory closures.
In response, on the evening of November 9, China's government unveiled a massive stimulus package. Officials gave the headline figure as 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion), to be spent over the next two years -- exceeding even the size of China's robust response to the 1997 Asian financial crisis. This marks the first time in almost a decade that China has officially adopted a "proactive" fiscal policy. The plan will benefit areas including transport and other infrastructure projects, healthcare, education, low-income housing, environmental protection and schemes to promote technological innovation. But will it work, and what is the outlook for the Chinese economy? Though some would like to see more done to encourage domestic consumption, for instance, or to support small businesses, reception has been broadly positive. Some early analysis suggests that the stimulus package could contribute in excess of 2 percent or 3 percent to growth, fending off any risk of a hard landing. Amid the pressure of a global slowdown, China will have to do something concrete to shift its growth engine from exports to consumption, which it has attempted to do for many years. (For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
|