Wednesday 10 October 2012

Should We Be More Like China?

All is not what it seems.  Copyright Philippa Roberts 2012
David Cameron in his speech to Conservative Party Conference today talked about China.  I got the impression that he was asking whether the British economy should be more like China, which is
"creating a new economy the size of Greece every three months".

Now, putting that claim aside (at least until Tim Harford or FactCheck come back and tell us if it's true or not), is the Chinese economy one we should be aspiring to?

Last year, China's GDP was 9.3%.  This looks really impressive, especially when compared to our growth rate of 0.8% in 2011 (OBR figure in March 2012 forecast).

In fact, only in the last week the IMF has revised its growth figure for the UK downwards, from 0.2% to -0.4%.  It was only three months ago that it was saying 0.2% growth was possible this year - now it's saying the economy will continue to shrink.  The 0.2% growth prediction was clearly more realistic than the Office for Budget Responsibility, which predicted 0.8% for 2012 in November 2011, and stuck by its guns in March this year, also saying that:

"We still expect the economy to avoid a technical recession with positive growth in the first quarter of 2012."

Obviously now, after three consecutive quarters of the economy shrinking, that doesn't look like a good call, but as JK Galbraith famously said:

"The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable."

That's a slight distraction.  As I was saying, copying China looks like a good idea, if you just take a snapshot of growth figures.  However, as I've mentioned before China is slowing.  Growth this year is predicted to fall to 7.7% and it looks like the July to September quarter will be the 7th in a row when growth has slowed.  Some commentators have been writing about the property boom in China, including this in the FT.  This property boom has come on the back of cheap credit and the now-expected property bubble sounds remarkably like the model that has just got us into our current mess.

The UK has a mature economy.  We industrialised over 200 years ago.  Many would argue that our economy was declining from the turn of the last century, but that this was disguised by two world wars.  Our average growth rates will never now be the same as those currently seen by China.  To make comparisons between growth in countries in Europe and China is to ignore the different economic histories, and makes no sense.

So I don't think we should aspire to grow like China.  We could aspire to green our economy at the rate China is greening theirs, invest in renewables with the same seriousness, but their model is not one which will fit us.  I'm still waiting for the vision of what our economy, a sustainable economy, will look like.



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