China Stimulus Package Asserts the Nation as International Player

China’s stimulus package does more than support its own infrastructure, but in concert wth the bailouts in other countries aims to avert a crippling global recession. For more …

China’s stimulus package does more than support its own infrastructure, but in concert wth the bailouts in other countries aims to avert a crippling global recession. For more information, read the following article from Money Morning:

The half-trillion-dollar stimulus package that China unveiled on Sunday underscores that country’s growing importance to the global economy and shows Beijing’s willingness to assume a leadership role in the battle to blunt a widening worldwide financial crisis, a top expert on China said Monday.

“China understands that it’s gaining importance in the world economy and that it’s going to participate in that process,” said Keith Fitz-Gerald, Money Morning’s investment director and a former professional trade advisor who’s spent more than two decades focusing on investment opportunities in China, Japan and the rest of the Asia region.

“Many experts will see this as just a ‘bailout’ that’s directed at Chinese infrastructure projects, Chinese technology companies and at holding the global financial crisis at bay,” Fitz-Gerald said. “But the real message here is that Beijing is going to pull out all the stops to ensure that its economy does not falter. And that’s because China realizes that it’s become the super glue that’s holding the rest of the planet together.”

China on Sunday unveiled what it described as a “massive” economic stimulus package—a planned capital infusion of $586 billion that it plans to use to reverse its slowing domestic growth, to loosen domestic credit and to offset factory shutdowns and massive job losses caused by an evisceration of its export sector. Analysts also expect export growth to stall and actually reach zero in the months to come as global demand almost completely dries up.

In making this move, China becomes the latest major country to announce a stimulus package, following such nations as the United States, Germany and Japan. Governments have been injecting billions of dollars into their economies, as central banks around the world slash interest rates, all in the hope of avoiding a whopper global recession. Just last week, researchers at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said that world growth would slow to a tepid 2.2 percent next year, down from the 3.7 percent growth estimated for this year. The IMF forecast for China slashed the growth rate down to 8.5 percent next year, down from an earlier projection of 9.3 percent.

But the world’s fourth-largest economy has almost reached the so-called “tipping point”—where increases in domestic demand can almost offset the loss of export revenue. So it wants to offset slowing global growth by stoking domestic demand—both to help itself and to remain enough of an economic oasis to possibly keep the global financial crisis from becoming a total financial rout. With record foreign reserves of nearly $2 trillion, China is in an excellent position to bring such financial firepower to bear on this growing global crisis, Money Morning’s Fitz-Gerald has repeatedly stated.

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“To the extent that people are still worried that China will fall apart because of the global credit crisis—well, that remains an unknown,” Fitz-Gerald said. “However, I would point out that China is still on track for 9.6 percent growth, and that even if they were to get a recession, their growth is still going to be seven or eight times what ours [here in the United States] is projected to be.”

China’s plan calls for boosted spending on roads, airports and other infrastructure projects, tax deductions for exporters, and increased aid to farmers and to the nation’s poor. China’s high-tech sector is expected to be a big recipient, as will its fledgling aerospace sector. Spending on education will increase, and so will outlays for healthcare and environmental-protection programs.

For this stimulus package to work, China will need corporate investment and bank lending for rural projects, smaller companies and consumers. Beijing might supply one-quarter of the announced spending, or $145 billion, with the rest coming from increased investment by Chinese state companies, bank lending or bond sales by local authorities for individual projects, Ting Lu, a Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. economist, told The Associated Press.

“Many state companies have a lot of cash,” Lu said. “They just need to use it.”

The Xinhua News Agency—China’s state-run news agency and the operator of China Radio International, the nation’s global shortwave broadcasting service—said late Sunday that the stimulus package represents “a shift long advocated by analysts of the Chinese economy and by some within the government. It comes amid indications that economic growth, exports and various industries are slowing.”

The decision was announced Sunday by the State Council after Premier Wen Jiabao presided over an executive meeting Wednesday. China reported in late October that its economy grew at a less-than-expected rate of 9 percent in the third quarter—its lowest level in five years and the fifth straight quarter that growth has slowed, MarketWatch.com reported.

At that meeting, Wen told government leaders that China must increase investment and consumer spending, maintain export growth, enhance corporate competitiveness, reform financial industries and improve the real estate industry so that it is able to grow in a healthy manner, according to a report read out on state television.

“We must implement the measures to ensure a fast and stable economic development,” Wen told those government leaders, the television report stated. “They are not only the needs of the development of ourselves, but also our biggest contribution to the world.”

China unveiled this huge financial package before President Hu Jintao attends a meeting of world leaders in Washington this week. The meeting is supposed to be a forum in which the leaders can discuss responses to the global crisis.

With this huge planned outlay, China has taken yet another giant step back from the anti-inflation measures and lending curbs that the Beijing central government has put in place over the past three years—only to start rolling them back since the middle part of this year because of mounting government alarm over falling exports and slowing economic growth. Those very real worries induced the government to embrace “dual targets” of nurturing continued frenetic economic growth while at the same time working to contain price increases. In that vein, Beijing has lifted limits on how much each China-based bank may lend and also cut interest rates three times in the past several weeks.

“As the global outlook deteriorates, we expect Chinese macro policy to turn increasingly aggressive,” Lu, the Merrill Lynch economist, and colleague T.J. Bond wrote in a research report Friday. “This is a key theme for China and indeed, the entire Asian region.”

This stimulus package will certainly provide a major boost to the Asia region. But its effects will be felt worldwide, says Money Morning’s Fitz-Gerald.

Westerners are “going to look at this stimulus package as a case of China trying to save its own butt,” Fitz-Gerald said. “What they don’t understand is that China views this as a case of them saving ours. That’s the big difference."

This article has been reposted from Money Morning. You can view the article on Money Morning’s investment news website here.

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