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economy·EconomybySepia

[Opinion] AI is not enough to arrest China’s decline

cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/55134497

Op-ed by Ruchir Sharma, Head of International business at Rockefeller Capital Management, an asset management company.

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Though many forecasters keep expecting China to surpass the US as the world’s leading economy, its growth peaked in 2021. Since then, China’s share of global GDP has fallen in nominal terms from 18 to 16.5 per cent, while the US share has risen to 26 per cent. China’s growth rate has dropped below the rest of the world, including the US. In real terms, independent estimates now put China’s growth in real terms closer to zero than to the official target of 4.5 to 5 per cent.

Even by the official numbers, AI is not providing a lift big enough to overcome other forces weighing on China, including its shrinking workforce, rising indebtedness, a broken property market, the revival of a meddlesome regulatory state and the resulting exodus of capital and people.

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The debt problem is partly a hangover of the great property bubble. Beijing responded to the global crisis of 2008 by pumping credit into real estate, which was the main contributor to growth in the last decade. Then the bubble popped, also in 2021.

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As property wealth shrivels so does consumer confidence, and retail sales are falling.

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Meanwhile, the government has moved on from property to pumping credit into new manufacturing industries, in effect replacing one debt bubble with another.

In late 2020, China launched a stunning regulatory crackdown on its big tech firms. Now, after retreating for a couple of years, an index tracking regulatory pressure is surging again. Giving up on making money in China, multinationals are scaling back operations. Net foreign direct investment is negative. Last year a record $425bn in capital flowed out of Chinese financial markets.

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People are leaving as well. The immigrant share of the population is stuck at just 0.1 per cent, a fraction of the share in India (which is just as populous). The number of western expats living in China has fallen markedly. It is historically unusual for a major power to have so little allure for foreigners and foreign money.

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The growing hype around Chinese AI doesn’t change the fact that 2021 was peak China. Given its demographic challenges and heavy debts, Beijing can’t do much to prop up domestic growth. It has shifted instead to dumping manufactured exports, but the resulting backlash is spreading fast. And AI isn’t a fix for everything. Its impressive powers may be the answer to many problems, but they can’t reverse the forces driving China’s decline.

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[Opinion] AI is not enough to arrest China’s declinehttps://www.ft.com/content/0dbbef33-059b-4ec9-b504-31f37a0c4053Open linkView original on mander.xyz
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