China’s policymakers plan to show more support for domestic demand this year but are likely to stop short of splashing out big on direct consumer subsidies, keeping their focus mainly on investment, three sources close to policy discussions said.
In recent weeks, top policymakers have repeatedly signalled their intention to work towards harvesting the consumer power of China’s 1.4 billion people, after economic growth in 2022 slumped to one of its weakest levels in nearly half a century.
That has raised expectations that large-scale household stimulus measures could be announced at an annual parliament meeting in March. Prominent academics have felt emboldened to speak publicly about sizeable demand-side measures such as 1 trillion yuan ($148.28 billion) or more in nationwide consumption vouchers.
The sources close to policy discussions, however, expect China to stick more closely to its familiar playbook of policies to support key industries and splurge on infrastructure, aiming to shore up jobs and incomes which will eventually lift consumer sentiment off record lows.
“There are limited options to stimulate consumption,” said one insider, who like the other sources spoke on condition of anonymity due to the closed-door nature of policy debates. “The possibility of giving cash handouts is small.”
China’s National Development and Reform Commission, the top state planner, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Last year was dismal for Chinese consumers, who bore the brunt of harsh COVID-19 curbs that were abruptly lifted in December. Retail sales fell 0.2%, the second worst performance since 1968, while per capita disposable income rose just 2.9%, the second smallest rise since 1989.
Many economists have argued for years that the world’s No. 2 economy should rebalance, relying more on domestic consumption and reducing its reliance on debt-backed investment, which now produces more debt than growth.
Reviving consumer demand quickly is even more critical for an economic recovery this year as the country’s exports falter amid a global slowdown and the crisis-hit property market struggles to get back on its feet.
But policymakers’ apparent reluctance to veer too swiftly, or too far, from their old investment playbook highlights the difficulty of any rebalancing act for the $18 trillion economy.
Since the Communist Party’s Central Economic Work Conference in December, top policymakers have repeated their intention to boost consumer’s spending power, without saying how.
President Xi Jinping said on Wednesday that China should take steps so that consumers “dare to spend without worrying about the future.”
World Bank data shows investment as a share of China’s GDP is almost 20 percentage points above the global average, while household consumption is almost 20 points below, a greater imbalance than Japan’s in the 1980s, before its long stagnation.
Change is easier said than done. Chinese leaders have signalled their intention to boost domestic consumption many times in the past decade, without much follow-through.
Policymakers worry that large cash handouts would worsen wealth inequality, lower productivity and fan inflation risks, said the sources involved in internal policy discussions. Some economists also say any sales gains could be short-lived.
“The government prefers to invest and launch projects,” said Guo Tianyong at Beijing’s Central University of Finance and Economics.
Given such concerns, arguments for Beijing-funded consumer vouchers in excess of 1 trillion yuan made by influential academics such as Yao Yang, dean of the National School of Development at Peking University, or for bolstering China’s barely noticeable social safety net made by most advocates of a consumer-centric growth model, are losing ground.
Advisers to Chinese policymakers worry that weakening demand in the West endangers manufacturing jobs. They argue that a range of industries, including emerging technologies such as AI, require support and that infrastructure spending needs to continue if youth unemployment is to be brought down from near-record levels.
“We must guarantee economic growth of above 5% this year. If economic growth revives, companies will have money and people will have jobs and incomes,” said an adviser to the Chinese cabinet.
The government is expected to widen its budget deficit to around 3% of GDP this year to accommodate those spending needs, policy insiders said, adding to overall debt in the economy.
Some analysts say pent-up demand during the pandemic may be enough for consumption to grow with little policy support. They point to new household savings reaching 17.8 trillion yuan last year, an increase of 7.9 trillion yuan from 2021.
But others warn that a large chunk of the rise may be explained by consumer’s safety-first reallocations into bank deposits and that many such deposits have long-term maturities.