How would a China bust hit Australia?

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From Jeremy Thorpe, PwC’s Chief Economist and is a Partner in PwC’s national Economics & Policy team, via China Matters:

As the economy of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has grown, it has matured from an overwhelming reliance on investment and exports to one in which a wealthier population has the capacity to consume more than previously.

With this maturation, the PRC’s economic growth is slowing to reflect a similar consumption-led economic profile to that seen in advanced economies. This shift is evident in the OECD’s long-term forecasts of GDP growth per capita (Figure 1).

Many commentators are concerned that a shock will disrupt the PRC’s steady path of slowing economic growth to the degree that the PRC experiences a ‘hard landing’.

This matters to Australia because the PRC is the country’s largest trading partner, accounting for nearly a third of all exports. While Australia has benefitted from the growth of the PRC economy, it also leaves us relatively more vulnerable in the event of a downturn.

Thus, Australia will not be able to avoid economic disruption in the event of a PRC hard landing, although the likely devaluation of the AUD will lessen the immediate shock. In the meantime, maximising overseas market opportunities for Australian businesses is an approach that provides some longerterm insurance for the Australian economy.

What might a hard landing look like?

The term hard landing lacks a precise definition. However, analysis of potential scenarios for a hard landing tend to assume a one-off immediate decline in GDP growth of three to five percentage points (from the current annual growth rate of about 6 per cent).

The cause of such a hard landing could come from a range of sources, including:

■ external sources, such as:
• a further escalation of the ongoing trade war with the United States. The immediate disruption caused by declining demand for PRC exports will be compounded as corporates re-direct global supply chains away from the PRC so that its capacity to export reduces;
• a US recession, which is now seen by many as a real possibility, would have a negative effect on PRC exports;

■ internal sources, such as:
• a debt meltdown in the shadow or formal banking systems. The Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) has noted that ‘perhaps the single biggest risk to the Chinese economy … lies in the financial sector and the big run-up in debt there over the past decade’;
• a property market correction;
• political disruption (potentially building on the pro-democracy unrest seen in Hong Kong).

As the RBA notes, ‘While there is a broad range of potential triggers for a more severe slowdown in economic growth in China, in recent years authorities have proved capable of responding to individual episodes that posed systemic risk.’

The likelihood of a hard landing is exacerbated if the triggers are released simultaneously.

Internal and external risks are already aligning, with the trade war slowing PRC economic growth and putting pressure on smaller PRC banks’ loan portfolios.

What should Australia do about…A PRC economic ‘hard landing’?

Baoshang Bank was the first PRC bank to fail in 20 years and two others also required government help. The impact of a PRC economic downturn will depend
on the severity and the duration of a hard landing. However, the policy response in Australia and the ability of our businesses to adjust will shape the nature and magnitude of the effect on Australia. The potential scope of outcomes is reflected in the range of results associated with a hard landing predicted by commentators, varying from:

■ recession inducing –
• Deloitte modelled the impact of a PRC hard landing in which PRC growth fell from 6.5 per cent to less than 3 per cent. The cost to Australia’s national income was 7 per cent ($140 billion) and 550,000 job losses;

■ to more benign –
• the Asian Development Bank published research that estimated a one percentage point drop in the PRC’s growth rate would cause GDP growth in Australia to fall by around 0.05 percentage points;
• the International Monetary Fund predicts that a four percentage point fall in Chinese growth would take 0.4 percentage points from Australian growth in the short term;
• RBA staff modelled three hard landing scenarios, noting that ‘We show that a slowdown in PRC economic activity of around 5 per cent could result in a decline in Australian GDP of up to 2½ per cent [after three years], depending on the nature of the scenario.’

To understand the nature and scale of the likely impacts, and what should be done, this brief investigates the impacts in the short term and over the medium term.

Short-term impacts

A significant drop in PRC growth will have an immediate negative impact on Australia’s exports to the PRC as lower incomes reduce demand for Australian goods and services. Any sharp drop in PRC growth will trigger a fall in the Australian Dollar against the United States Dollar and other major traded currencies because the AUD is seen as a proxy currency for the PRC economy.

For companies with the bulk of their earnings from overseas buyers (e.g. education, tourism, etc.), a fall in the AUD would be a welcome event. Even domestically focused organisations with non-PRC investments will benefit from such a depreciation in the AUD.

As the tradeable goods sector makes up about 40 per cent of the Consumer Price Index basket, such a depreciation of the AUD would increase consumerprices (i.e. inflation) in Australia. This would ordinarily be seen as a bad outcome, but with inflation below the RBA target range of 2-3 per cent, increased inflationary pressure will be unlikely to have a major impact on the Australian economy.

Australian state and federal governments will lose revenue from a PRC hard landing. Most directly will be the loss of mining-related tax revenues. At risk are:
■ state and territory royalties — in 2019-20 I expect mining companies to pay $14.8 billion in royalties to state and territory governments. In practice the bulk of royalties are captured by Western Australia ($6.4 billion) and Queensland ($5.6 billion);
■ Commonwealth company taxes — in 2019-20 I expect mining companies to pay the Commonwealth in the order of $31.1 billion in company tax.9 For context, in 2019-20 the Australian Government expects to spend the same amount ($31.5 billion) on school education and higher education. Reduced demand for natural resources in the PRC will cascade into lower commodity prices more generally and so undermine projections of the Commonwealth heading back into a Budget surplus (projected to be $7.1 billion in 2019-20).11

Any significant fall in commodity prices off the back of the PRC’s accelerated slowdown would likely result in mine closures or mothballings, with consequent job losses in pockets of regional Australia and lower royalties.

Hence, in addition to the revenue shock for Australian governments, there would also be additional budgetary costs from a PRC slowdown. These would take the form of:

■ additional stimulus provided (whether in the form of direct payments to households, accelerated infrastructure spending, etc.);
■ increased welfare payments as unemployment increases;
■ increased welfare and other payments where they are linked to CPI changes;
■ higher debt servicing payments as budgets move into deficit.

Additionally, access to capital for both public and private organisations will become more challenging in this environment as we can expect to see:

■ rising bank funding costs (as Australia’s risk premia rises);

■ reduced foreign investment. At most risk is PRC investment. The PRC is Australia’s fifth largest direct investor. This will in turn result in tighter liquidity. Limiting the downside of a hard landing, but also limiting the benefits to Australia during the PRC’s rise, is that Australia has only a limited exposure to the PRC through investments into the PRC. The PRC hosts just 3 per cent of Australian investment abroad (compared to 29 per cent in the US) and so the direct downside is limited from an investment perspective.

Medium-term impacts

In the medium term we can expect to see some of the negative first-round impacts of a hard landing ameliorated.

1. Impacts of the AUD’s depreciation The depreciation of the AUD will increase the competitiveness of:

■ all Australian exporters, acknowledging however that the PRC downturn will drag down global growth;
■ domestic firms competing with international rivals in Australia. For example, as long as the PRC Government does not seek to reign in its students studying abroad, we may see Australia attract a new cohort of price-sensitive PRC students shifting from higher cost markets or coming to Australia as the cost of education falls.

The risk for the Australian economy is that the PRC currency (CNY) will likely decline, which will partially offset the decline in the AUD/USD rate. Hence, while the depreciation of the AUD is an important shock absorber, it may be less responsive in the case of a PRC hard landing.

2. Impact of a global slowdown

As the largest global trader, the PRC’s economic health affects the global economy as a whole. Thus, we can expect that other countries will also take a hit from a PRC hard landing, leading to lower global economic growth generally. This will depress growth opportunities as companies look to diversify away from the PRC.

3. Potential PRC responses

History (e.g. during the GFC) suggests that we could also expect the PRC to respond to any major downturn in growth with stimulatory measures designed to boost growth. Such measures have tended to involve major construction initiatives, with consequent increases in demand for Australian natural resources (iron ore and coal predominantly). This has the potential to be a major offset against an initial downturn in demand.

However, it is also possible the PRC Government’s concerns about its current account position will result in more active measures to control outbound:

■ tourism spending – outbound tourism is a material negative impact in terms of the PRC’s current account balance;
■ international student flows – there is a medium/long term ambition to lift standards domestically and thus moderate outbound flow of students. Both of these possible responses would be significant shocks to major Australian service export industries.

Additionally, we can reasonably expect to see:
■ an increase in nationalistic rhetoric in the PRC to divert attention from the country’s economic challenges. This may further increase the global risk profile and limit trade;
■ a reduction in state-directed investment as a form of diplomatic engagement.

Policy recommendations

Pre-emptively, the Australian Government should:

■ continue prosecuting broad free trade agreements (FTAs) to enhance flexibility for exporters in the event of a PRC hard landing.

• the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (ASEAN plus Australia, India, Japan, New Zealand, the PRC and South Korea). The 16 participating countries account for over 60 per cent of Australia’s two-way trade, 17 per cent of two-way investment, and over 65 per cent of Australia’s goods and services exports;
• the Australia-European Union FTA will open up a market for Australian goods and services of half a billion people and a GDP of US$17.3 trillion;
■ invest in supporting Australian firms to enter/ grow in a broader range of markets (e.g. India). Such an approach needs to acknowledge, however, that companies follow demand and the PRC will remain Australia’s largest export market;
■ ensure that the risks/costs of a PRC hard landing are adequately captured in bank provisions so that any significant downturn can be accommodated/managed by the Australian banks.

Hence, in the event of a hard landing the Australian
Government should:

■ resist the temptation to ‘protect’ or ‘support’ the AUD; the AUD’s flexibility is a key mechanism for managing the shock of a PRC hard landing;
■ be prepared to sacrifice projections of the Budget returning to surplus given likely tax revenue shocks and the need to increase spending to stimulate the economy;
■ be nimble diplomatically to respond to changing dynamics in countries of diplomatic interest if the PRC pulls back state-directed investment;
■ assist negatively affected agricultural producing and resource-intensive communities to adjust to a PRC slowdown.

The Deloitte scenario seems a pretty good base case to me. It would obviously result in recession as housing cracked.

Either in a shock through the death of a thousand cuts, this is still why I see AUD going to 40 cents as China goes ex-growth one way or another.

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About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.