Trade Wars Redux? China’s Manufacturing Glut and Its Global Implications

 | Mar 25, 2024 06:10AM ET

China’s economy continues to struggle 15 months after “reopening” from their COVID lockdowns (December 2022).

Now, back then, many media pundits expected a booming Chinese recovery as pent-up savers splurged. Inflation was set to re-surge amid all this Chinese demand. And Chinese stocks looked primed to rise.

Oh, how wrong they were.

But that shouldn’t come as a surprise.

Why?

Because, as I highlighted before on China’s anemic economy in August 2023 – you can read here – China is dealing with many structural issues. Ones that cannot be fixed easily.

Long story short, it appears China is dealing with its version of the 2008 Financial Crisis as property prices sink, banks and corporations tumble, and deflation spreads.

But the real story here is how China is trying to fend off this crisis. . .

Because it will likely have global ripple effects.

So, let’s take a closer look at some of this potential contagion.

h2 China Tries to Offset a Property Slowdown by Flooding Money Into The Manufacturing Sector/h2

Here’s a bit of context on how we got here: Beijing in 2018-19 began cracking down on the rampant property sector (which is estimated to have made up roughly 30% of the total GDP). A big reason was the excessive amount of debt being used to overbuild.

I’m sure you’ve heard of “ghost cities” in China – aka the eerie towns that are full of unoccupied buildings decaying away.

All this excessive construction created growth. For instance, just imagine all the labor, concrete, copper, etc that went into building these ghost cities.

The catch? Well, it was fueled with debt and led to overcapacity – meaning too much supply relative to demand. Hence prices have been declining as all this excess can’t be absorbed by buyers. And even worse is that prices are declining against debt (imagine taking out debt to buy an asset, only for the asset price to decline – what an ugly combination).

To highlight this point, He Keng – a former deputy head of the statistics bureau – recently said at a forum that China’s 1.4 billion population “probably can’t fill” all the vacant homes.

So, it’s safe to assume there’s too much property supply. Thus, China’s short-term focus on boosting growth is now showing its dark side.

But what has Beijing decided to do about this?

Well, as the property sector reels, they have pushed for investment in the manufacturing sector to offset it.

For instance – according to the Atlantic Council – Chinese banks are facilitating massive new borrowing for China’s manufacturers as property loans collapse.

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In fact, in Q3 2023 Chinese banks extended nearly $700 billion in new loans— often lent at below-market interest rates — to the sector compared to the previous year.