PC 2015 06 280415 PDF
PC 2015 06 280415 PDF
PC 2015 06 280415 PDF
POLICY
CONTRIBUTION
ISSUE 2015/06
APRIL 2015
A COMPELLING CASE
FOR CHINESE
MONETARY EASING
GUONAN MA
Highlights
Chinese monetary policy was excessively tight in 2014 but started loosening
in late 2014, in an attempt to cushion growth, facilitate rebalancing, support
reform and mitigate financial risk.
There are three main reasons for this policy shift. First, there is evidence that the
Chinese economy has been operating below its potential capacity. Second,
among the big five economies, Chinas monetary policy stance and broader
financial condition both tightened the most in the wake of the global financial
crisis, likely weighing on domestic growth. Third, a mix of easy monetary policy
and neutral fiscal policy would serve China best at the current juncture, because
it would support domestic demand and help with the restructuring of China's
local government debts, while facilitating a move away from the soft dollar peg.
Telephone
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Such a warranted shift in monetary policy stance faces the challenges of uncertain potential growth, a more liberalised financial system, an evolving monetary policy framework, the legacy of excess leverage and a politicised policy
debate.
Guonan Ma (guonan.ma@bruegel.org) is a Non-Resident Scholar at Bruegel and a
Senior Fellow at Fung Global Institute (Hong Kong). The views expressed in this
paper are those of the author alone. The author is grateful to Warren Lu for his
excellent research assistance.
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Chinese growth slowdown. Thus, an accommodative monetary policy is unwarranted and at odds
with reform and restructuring. Instead, monetary
easing is not only a show of no confidence in
reform but also an attempt to sabotage reform. In
short: no pain, no gain.
The less ideologically driven arguments point to a
still buoyant Chinese labour market in spite of
weaker growth as evidence for an economy near its
lower growth potential. A shrinking Chinese labour
force, a possible Lewis Turning Point, a bigger jobintense service sector and the attendant slower
total productivity growth might all combine to trim
underlying growth potential consistent with noninflationary full employment (Ma, McCauley and
Lam, 2012). Therefore, slower headline GDP growth
can still be compatible with an economy operating
at or near full capacity, questioning any need for
monetary accommodation. Such concerns are valid
and will be addressed in this paper.
The opposite, easing camp thinks that sensible,
nimble monetary easing complements economic
reform, cushions growth, facilitates structural
adjustment and mitigates financial risk. Reform is
not a sacred cow but a means to improve living
standards for the majority of the Chinese population. And economic reform calls for sensible shifts
in the monetary policy stance in response to business cycles. The Chinese economy is unbalanced,
but one doesnt need to strangle it in order to rebalance it. On the contrary, an excessively tight monetary policy could aggravate structural imbalances.
According to the easing camp, the Taylor rule, the
Mundell-Fleming model and the global beauty contest of monetary easing among G5 central banks
(the US Federal Reserves, PBC, Bank of Japan, European Central Bank and Bank of England) all suggest
an excessively tight monetary policy stance for
most of 2014 and thus a need for a meaningful Chinese monetary relaxation. Both cyclically and
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structurally, the case for timely and measured
monetary accommodation is strong.
This controversy in China looks odd, especially
viewed through the lens of the US, the euro area
and Japan, where the consensus view among policymakers is that both aggressive demand-support
policy measures and strong structural reforms on
the supply side should go hand-in-hand. And why
not? So the really puzzling question to begin with is
why one should have to make a stark choice
between them instead of sensibly combining the
two. In my view, a healthy Chinese economy needs
both structural reforms on the supply side to
enhance potential growth, and a nimble monetary
policy to exploit the potential and mitigate possible headwinds on the demand side.
To put the policy controversy into perspective, one
might wish to first better understand the broader
backdrop for the Chinese economy briefly
sketched here. The debate over monetary policy
took place against a complex background of many
moving parts, such as diverging global monetary
policies, volatile cross-border capital flows, slower
domestic economic growth, falling domestic inflation, painful economic rebalancing, a gathering
pace of financial liberalisation, signs of increased
financial stress and an evolving monetary policy
framework.
After three decades of double-digit growth from
1980-2010, the Chinese economy embarked on a
transition to a new phase of its development in the
wake of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) (Ma,
McCauley and Lam, 2012). This transition features
a slower pace of growth, a shrinking current
account surplus, and a catching-up service sector.
GDP growth slowed from 10 percent averaged
during 2000-2010 to 8 percent during 2011-2014
and is expected to decelerate further to 7 percent in
2015, while the current surplus fell from 10 percent
of GDP in 2007 to 2 percent in 2014. Such external
rebalancing is attained mostly through an even
more lop-sided internal imbalance of a higher
investment ratio and rising leverage.
A healthy Chinese economy needs both structural reforms on the supply side to enhance
potential growth, and a nimble monetary policy to exploit the potential and mitigate possible
headwinds on the demand side.
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As a starting point, most economists and central
bankers use the well-known Taylor rule to assess
the central bank policy stance (Taylor, 1993). A
standard Taylor rule essentially links a short-term
nominal policy rate to two gaps for a given inflation
target and real long-run equilibrium interest rate
consistent with trend growth: the gap between
actual and targeted inflation (the inflation gap) and
the gap between actual and potential output (the
output gap). A positive output or inflation gap, or
both, suggests a need to tighten by hiking the
policy rate. If the actual policy rate is below that
implied by the Taylor rule, the policy stance is considered too accommodating. If the actual policy rate
is above that implied by the Taylor rule, the policy
stance is considered too restrictive.
In reality, many factors help shape this Taylor rate
hence the controversy in China over how tight the
PBC monetary policy was before the latest monetary relaxation. In this light, three useful questions
can be highlighted. What weight does the PBC
attach to inflation? Has the Chinese economy been
operating near full capacity? How should one
gauge the monetary policy stance of the PBC?
First, how important is inflation relative to other
policy objectives? The PBC for sure is no official
inflation targeter, flexible or otherwise. The 1994
Chinese central bank law explicitly stipulates the
PBCs four policy objectives: price stability, employment, economic growth and balance of payments.
In practice, financial stability and credit allocation
are also high on the PBC agenda. However, Giradin,
Lunven and Ma (2014) estimate the PBC monetary
policy reaction function and conclude that inflation
10
30
25
Product inventory
20
19
Industrial profit
4
2
CPI
15
RPI
10
17
15
13
11
-8
-5
-10
-10
-2
PPI
-4
Source: Bruegel.
01/12
03/12
05/12
07/12
09/12
11/12
01/13
03/13
05/13
07/13
09/13
11/13
01/14
03/14
05/14
07/14
09/14
11/14
06/08
10/08
02/09
06/09
10/09
02/10
06/10
10/10
02/11
06/11
10/11
02/12
06/12
10/12
02/13
06/13
10/13
02/14
06/14
10/14
-6
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The economic slowdown might simply reflect lower
potential growth, which could arise from rebalancing pains, demographic headwinds, less low-hanging fruit in market liberalisation and a less
accommodating global economy (Ma, McCauley
and Lam, 2012). Unfortunately, Chinese growth
potential, while likely trending lower, is not directly
observable, and estimates of it can be elusive and
with big margins of error (Morley, 2014; Ma and
Hong, 2015; Blagrave et al, 2015). Some Chinese
labour statistics seem to suggest that employment
has held up well, as wages are still rising. Thus,
weaker growth might not necessarily imply a
widening negative output gap and rising unemployment, and hence there would be no case for
policy easing.
In the absence of more consistent, reliable and
accurate estimates of the underlying Chinese
potential growth rate, what can help inform us
about the likely output gap? In my view, the persistent and intensifying disinflationary and even
deflationary pressures at a time of marked deceleration of economic growth are the most telling
signs that the Chinese economy is operating well
below its potential capacity. It adds to the already
high real corporate debt burden, especially for Chinese manufacture borrowers.
Still, rapid wage hikes and an apparent lack of corporate pricing power might also combine to hurt
corporate earnings, resulting in declining returns
on capital and thus weaker private investment
spending. Rising real interest rates will tend to
punish more the most productive and interest-rate
sensitive sector in the Chinese economy: the small,
15
Real 10 year
14
13
2
12
11
10
-2
Real 1 year
-4
7
01-Mar-07
01-Aug-07
01-Jan-08
01-Jun-08
01-Nov-08
01-Apr-09
01-Sep-09
01-Feb-10
01-Jul-10
01-Dec-10
01-May-11
01-Oct-11
01-Mar-12
01-Aug-12
01-Jan-13
01-Jun-13
01-Nov-13
01-Apr-14
01-Sep-14
01-Jan-07
01-Jun-07
01-Nov-07
01-Apr-08
01-Sep-08
01-Feb-09
01-Jul-09
01-Dec-09
01-May-10
01-Oct-10
01-Mar-11
01-Aug-11
01-Jan-12
01-Jun-12
01-Nov-12
01-Apr-13
01-Sep-13
01-Feb-14
01-Jul-14
01-Dec-14
-6
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In short, on the grounds of both inflation gap and
output gap, the Taylor rule recommends a shift
towards a less restrictive monetary policy stance.
Unless, of course, financial stability concern ranks
higher on the PBC agenda. A too-low interest rate
could fuel unsustainable shadow banking expansion, excess leverage and asset price booms. China
has experienced a massive credit binge since
2007, with total credit to the non-financial private
sector, including the fast expanding shadow banking, rising from 120 percent of GDP in 2007 to 180
percent in 2014 (Figure 3). If central and local government debts are included, the overall leverage in
China could approach 250 percent of GDP. Thus an
excessively loose policy could potentially add to
the already growing financial imbalances.
Nevertheless, excessively tight monetary conditions could also run the risk of a disorderly deleveraging. First, our knowledge about effects of
monetary policy to lean against the wind for financial stability reasons is still limited, which could
involve the less understood complex dynamics of
intertemporal cost-benefit trade-offs (Ajello et al,
2015; Svensson, 2015). Second, macroprudential
measures rather than monetary policy might be a
better instrument in dealing with financial stability
issues in most cases (Claeys and Darvas, 2015).
Third, as nominal GDP slowed down from the 15-20
percent range in the 2000s to some 10 percent in
the 2010s so far (Figure 3), an excessively restrictive monetary policy could most likely aggravate
the already rising debt-service pressures rather
than mitigating them and indeed could instigate a
dangerous debt deflation spiral.
Figure 3: Nominal and real GDP growth and private-sector debt in China
Annual GDP growth (%)
25
180
20
160
Nominal GDP
140
15
120
100
10
80
60
Real GDP
40
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2014
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
20
0
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tested a few new weapons in its arsenal, such as
the Short-term Liquidity Operations (SLO), Standing Lending Facility (SLF), Medium-term Lending
Facility (MLF), Pledged Supplementary Lending
(PSL) and Pledged Relending (PRL), probably in
an attempt to influence market-based interest
rates in an environment of volatile two-way capital
flows and more liberalised interest rates. The pros
and cons of these new instruments aside, most
PBC watchers find it harder than before to read the
underlying PBC monetary policy stance.
Further, the PBC often communicated its policy
stance in a confusing manner. Its policy statements are opaque and difficult to decode even for
seasoned PBC watchers. The PBC has a history of
intentionally surprising, shocking and sometime
even misleading the market, which should be
taken as a sign of low confidence on the part of the
Chinese central bank. While many OECD central
banks nowadays provide forward guidance to
reinforce and amplify the impact of monetary
policy on the full market yield curve, by communicating to the public about the expected future
path of the policy rate, the PBC appears to often
dilute what it has just done, by issuing puzzling
backward guidance, cautioning the market not to
interpret its latest rate and RRR cuts as monetary
easing (Ma, 2015).
Nevertheless, the signs of monetary easing since
mid-2014 have been plenty and beyond doubt.
Initially, the PBC selectively lowered its RRR and
extended loans to small banks and policy banks
via its refinancing facilities. It has even leaned on
commercial banks to lend more to first-time home
buyers at official mortgage rates. Liquidity has
also been injected via its new facilities in an apparent attempt to keep a lid on the interbank interest
rates. From late 2014, the PBC finally acted more
decisively, by cutting outright benchmark bank
deposit and lending interest rates and RRR. Some
of these belated moves aimed to offset the tighter
domestic liquidity arising from increased dollar
outflows and thus may not be as expansionary as
they look. Nevertheless, in combination, these
moves must be interpreted as meaningful monetary relaxation.
The PBC can be more forthright in communicating
its desire to hit lower and steadier short-term or
even mid-term rates, paving the way for the transition to a new monetary policy regime. A clear and
firm PBC policy signal could also help flatten and
stabilise the Chinese yield curve, which matters
more for investment and consumption decisions.
As a minimum, the PBC should avoid diluting the
signalling effect of its own new policy moves.
Also, lowering the benchmark 18 percent RRR
would help nudge down the long yields by adding
permanent liquidity into the system and offsetting
the tightening effect of the capital outflows seen in
the fourth quarter of 2014, and would also go
some way toward mitigating distortions and containing shadow banking by bringing some off-balance-sheet lending back onto the books. Failures
to sterilise capital outflows would result in de facto
monetary tightening at a time of weakening
growth and falling inflation.
More importantly, by acting swiftly and decisively,
the PBC can be in a stronger position to tighten
again when the cycle turns. Monetary policy
measures need to be taken early to counter the
headwinds facing the Chinese economy, because
it would typically take two to four quarters for a
change in policy stance to take effect. Timely policy
response is the best way to avoid excessive monetary stimulus. Some academics and investors
tend to under-appreciate the fact that the mindboggling credit binge in late 2008, mostly related
to local government borrowing, was in part a sad
response to the already emerging panic partially
triggered by the decisively late monetary policy
actions at that time (Tanaka, 2010). Then, much of
this belated massive monetary expansion funded
quasi-fiscal spending rather than helping cushion
the Chinese economy via standard channels. So
this time, China ought to ease in a timely way.
To sum up, in light of growth, inflation and financial stability, the standard Taylor rule suggests
that China ought to ease its monetary policy in a
timely and confident way.
A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
So far, I have made a domestic case for monetary
relaxation, as our discussion has been mostly
framed within the closed-economy version of the
Taylor rule. Can a similar case be made for Chinese
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monetary relaxation from a global perspective?
While Chinas capital control still binds (Ma and
McCauley, 2008 and 2013) and central banks set
monetary policy mainly to cater for domestic
needs in most economies, the question is still
meaningful, because China is the top trader,
second largest economy and third biggest creditor nation globally. Of course, China, known for its
so-called export-led growth model, hardly qualifies as a closed economy.
Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan
has raised concerns about the international
spillovers from competitive monetary easing
among major central banks (Rajan, 2014). Rajans
concerns make sense. By definition, the world is a
closed economy and often dominated by a few
major central banks that behave more like price
setters than price takers. Price in this context used
to be some benchmark short rate only, but in the
wake of the GFC also included the fuller yield curve.
Thus strong policy measures taken by major central banks ought to produce global repercussions.
This in turn poses the interesting question of how
loose or tight Chinas monetary policy might be relative to its major international peers. In particular,
how did the PBC fare in the global race towards
monetary accommodation from the 2007 GFC?
Has the PBC outdone its global peers in the monetary loosening game? This is a question of global
perspective, and there is no better benchmark
than the club of the central banks that issue the
four constituent currencies of the IMF Special
Drawing Rights (SDRs): the US Federal Reserve
(Fed), the European Central Bank (ECB), the Bank
Figure 4: Real policy rates and real eective exchange rates for G5 central banks
Real policy rates*, annual %
5
4
3
2
1
0
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
130
120
110
100
90
80
PBC
Fed
ECB
BoJ
BoE
1/1/07
1/5/07
1/9/07
1/1/08
1/5/08
1/9/08
1/1/09
1/5/09
1/9/09
1/1/10
1/5/10
1/9/10
1/1/11
1/5/11
1/9/11
1/1/12
1/5/12
1/9/12
1/1/13
1/5/13
1/9/13
1/1/14
1/1/07
1/5/07
1/9/07
1/1/08
1/5/08
1/9/08
1/1/09
1/5/09
1/9/09
1/1/10
1/5/10
1/9/10
1/1/11
1/5/11
1/9/11
1/1/12
1/5/12
1/9/12
1/1/13
1/5/13
1/9/13
1/1/14
70
Yuan
US$
Euro
Yen
Sterling
Source: Bruegel based on Datastream and BIS. Note: * Policy rate less actual CPI inflation. The official ceiling for the one-year
deposit rate is taken as the policy rate of the PBC.
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rates. Indeed, the four SDR central banks of the US
Fed, ECB and BoE had persistently maintained
negative real policy rates during the period, financial repression or otherwise. Even the BoJ managed to push its real policy rate into negative
territory after 2013, as inflation rose in the wake of
its Quantitative and Qualitative Easing. Some
other central banks (National Bank of Denmark,
ECB and Swiss National Bank) even impose outright negative nominal policy rates. In any case,
China no doubt had the highest real policy rates
among the five major central banks during this
period.
Of course, unconventional monetary policy went
one step further to influence the long end of the
yield curve. The exchange rates of the big four SDR
currencies were thus indirectly influenced. In
Chinas case, the PBC directly manages both its
interest rate and exchange rate to some extent,
given the still binding capital controls frustrating
cross-border arbitrage. Either way, the real effective exchange rate serves to highlight another
important aspect of monetary policy. And sustained and large movements in currencies redistribute growth across the globe.
The BIS real effective exchange rate data reveals
that among the G5 currencies, only the Chinese
renminbi (RMB) showed sizable appreciation (35
percent) from 2007 to mid-2014 (the right panel
of Figure 4). Meanwhile, the other four SDR
member currencies (the dollar, euro, yen and sterling) had registered 5 percent to 15 percent real
effective depreciation. Note that the yen appreciated noticeably between 2007 and 2012 until the
start of the so-called Abenomics, but by March
2014 had weakened by 30 percent from its peak
in 2011. Since mid-2014, the divergent monetary
policies of major central banks have led to broad
and marked US dollar strength, pushing a still
loosely dollar-anchored RMB even stronger in
broad real effective terms (not shown in Figure 4).
A much stronger and potentially overvalued renminbi likely redistributed growth away from China
to the rest of the world.
China bore the brunt of the global demand and current-account rebalancing from 2007-14. Both
rising domestic real interest rates and a strengthening real effective exchange rate at the same
time have produced considerable pressures on the twin external and internal rebalancing.
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Third, Chinas relatively tight monetary policy has
likely absorbed a big trunk of the international
spillovers from the competitive monetary easing
implemented by other major central banks, by not
adding to the massive global monetary stimulus.
This should in turn help dampen the volatility of
those highly procyclical capital flows to emerging
markets and ease the competitive devaluation
pressure globally. China has so far endured the
external deflationary shocks, acting as a source
of global financial stability.
The bottom line is that in the wake of the GFC, the
PBC stance was the most restrictive among the G5
central banks. In other words, the PBC was quite
restrained, while the other big four central banks
pursued
more
aggressive
monetary
accommodation. There is little doubt that the
relatively tight Chinese monetary policy both
redistributed global demand away from domestic
to foreign products and weighed on Chinese
domestic demand. Therefore, China ought to
loosen its relatively tight monetary policy.
This global comparative framework can go one
step further by constructing a broader Financial
Conditions Index (FCI) for the same G5
economies, and asking the question of whether
Chinas financial condition be another suspect
contributing to its marked growth slowdown on the
demand side. The rationale is that if the same
monetary policy stance is to have a similarly
meaningful effect on economic agents depends
in part on the transmission channels. An expansionary monetary policy might or might not help
deliver a more relaxing financial environment
facing business and consumers.
Given a monetary policy stance, the functioning
of a financial system itself matters for growth performance as well. Europes half-asleep banking
sector is a case in point (Darvas, 2013). If the
recent Chinese economic slowdown was primarily
structural, laxer financial conditions would not
help and might even worsen the structural problems that dragged down economic growth in the
first place. Indeed, China over the past few years
has witnessed concurrently weaker growth and
rising credit as a ratio to GDP, in contrast to a creditless recovery in the euro area.
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its latest strong resurge and stabilising government bond yields from the second half of 2014.
Finally, the paths of the nominal and real FCIs
have differed somewhat among these big five
economies in the post-2007 period, but all indicate tighter financial conditions in China both over
time and relative to its international peers
between 2007 and mid-2014. While the real FCIs
of the five major economies have shown noticeable swings, their nominal counterparts except
Chinas display steady, large and synchronised
declines, indicating considerable easing of the
financial conditions outside China.
In sum, Chinas financial condition was clearly the
most restrictive during 2007-2014 among the G5
economies of China, the US, the euro area, Japan
and the UK. Intuitively, this revealed that Chinas
financial tightening, both over time and relative to
its international peers, could have meaningfully
weighed on its economy. Interestingly, our pricebased FCI contrasts sharply with the observed Chinese credit surge in the wake of the GFC.
The tighter Chinese financial conditions could in
part be policy-induced and in part relate to other
institutional and fundamental changes in the Chinese economy, potentially contributing to slower
economic growth. In any case, Chinese policymakers ought to take notice of such marked, sustained and broad-based tightness of the financial
conditions. It would be very brave for anyone to
claim that the tighter broad Chinese financial conditions had little to do with the recent Chinese economic slowdown. Suffice to say that a tighter
broad financial environment tends to hurt the private firms more and add to the financial woes of
heavily indebted local governments in China.
Therefore, as an insurance policy, China ought to
ease its monetary policy.
Much more still needs to be learned about the
causes underlying the more restrictive Chinese
financial conditions against a background of
falling growth and more liberalised market environments. This task is beyond the scope of this
paper. For instance, a rigid 75 percent regulatory
cap on the bank loan-to-deposit ratio and a punitive 20 percent reserve requirement ratio both
might have added to financial tightness in the Chinese economy, prompting policymakers in Beijing
to tweak these rules in an attempt to loosen the
domestic financial conditions (Ma, 2014b).
Another, complementary possibility is that the PBC
easing remained behind the curve, as indicated
by the Chinese business cycle.
All said, in the wake of the GFC, not only did the
Chinese monetary policy stance tighten the most
among the big five central banks, but also the
broader Chinese financial conditions became the
most restrictive among the G5 economies. Thus,
the case for Chinese monetary easing is also compelling in the global context.
China
USA
Euro area
Japan
Feb-14
Apr-13
Sep-13
Nov-12
Jan-12
Jun-12
Aug-11
-2.0
Oct-10
-2.0
Mar-11
-1.5
May-10
-1.0
-1.5
Jul-09
-1.0
Jan-07
0.0
-0.5
Jan-07
May-07
Sep-07
Jan-08
May-08
Sep-08
Jan-09
May-09
Sep-09
Jan-10
May-10
Sep-10
Jan-11
May-11
Sep-11
Jan-12
May-12
Sep-12
Jan-13
May-13
Sep-13
Jan-14
0.0
-0.5
Dec-09
0.5
Feb-09
1.0
0.5
Apr-08
1.5
1.0
Sep-08
1.5
Nov-07
Jun-07
UK
Source: Bruegel based on Datastream and BIS. Notes: * A rise suggests tightening. A positive number indicates tighter than the
sample average. The official ceiling for the one-year deposit rate is taken as the policy rate of the PBC. The benchmark stock
market indices are Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index for China, S&P 500 for the US, Nikkei 225 for Japan, FTSE 100
for the UK, and a market cap weighted average of CAC 40, DAX 30, IBEX 35, FTSE Mid and AEX (January 2007=100) for the euro
area. ** The real interest rate and exchange rate are nominal rates adjusted for current CPI inflation.
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A POLICY NEXUS PERSPECTIVE
Finally, I will make a case for Chinese monetary
easing within the framework of optimal monetary
and fiscal policy mix. In this light, two main arguments are put forward, one from the open macroeconomic model perspective and the other from
the domestic fiscal and monetary policy interaction perspective.
First, a standard Fleming-Mundell model (Dornbusch, 1976) postulates that under the assumptions of open capital account and exchange-rate
flexibility, a combination of loose monetary policy
and neutral fiscal policy would be the best way for
China to contain external deflationary shocks,
cushioning growth while introducing two-way
market expectations and volatility of the renminbi
exchange rate and incremental capital opening.
Since mid-2014, the PBC has considerably scaled
down its routine foreign exchange interventions
and widened the onshore daily trading band of the
renminbi. Moreover, the Chinese capital account
has become more open over time (Ma and
McCauley, 2008 and 2013). The recent gathering
pace of the renminbi internationalisation can be
viewed as capital opening by stealth (Cheung, Ma
and McCauley, 2011). Increased financial openness implies greater sensitivity of cross-border
financial flows to price signals, which in turn will
be influenced by the mix of monetary and fiscal
policy.
So, what would be a sensible mix of fiscal and
monetary policy in the context of a more open
capital account, effectively appreciating and more
Figure 6: The RMB daily trading band and the USD Index
RMB per US$*
6.4
100
6.3
95
6.2
90
6.1
85
6.0
80
6.3
6.3
6.2
6.2
6.1
Fixing
Closing
Weak side
6.1
Strong side
6.0
4/1/15
4/11/14
4/9/14
4/7/14
4/5/14
4/3/14
4/1/14
4/9/13
4/11/13
4/7/13
4/5/13
4/3/13
4/1/15
4/11/14
4/9/14
4/7/14
4/5/14
4/3/14
4/1/14
4/11/13
4/9/13
4/7/13
4/5/13
4/3/13
4/1/13
4/1/13
75
5.9
Source: Bruegel. Notes: * The daily trading band was 1% before March 2014 and 2% afterwards. ** The USD index is the US
Fed narrow basket index. The RMB-USD is number of RMB per USD.
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There is real moral hazard risk associated with Chinas high and unsustainable level of local
government debt. Local government officials have strong incentives to borrow to fund their pet
investment projects, but then leave messy debts to their successors.
rate via its daily fixing (Figure 6). In my view, if
managed properly, this is a healthy adjustment for
three reasons.
First, the renminbi will likely continue strengthening on a broad real effective basis, despite the
prospect of some near-term weakness against a
strong dollar. In 2014, the renminbi depreciated
2.5 percent against the dollar but gained 7 percent
in trade-weighted terms, according to BIS data. The
Chinese currency is likely to again outperform
most advanced and emerging market currencies
in 2015, remaining a source of global financial stability. More importantly, China should move further away from its loose dollar peg to gain policy
autonomy under a more open capital account.
Second, greater two-way volatility vis--vis the US
dollar is a crucial step to move further away from
the already loose dollar peg which has historically
served China well as a credible nominal anchor.
Indeed, the Chinese inflation record has fared
better under the dollar peg since 1994 than during
1978-1993. But its time is up, as the Chinese
economy has simply become too big to be
anchored to the US dollar or any single currency
alone, even in a loose fashion. Effective stability
of the renminbi better serves Chinas long-term
interests (Ma and McCauley, 2011).
Third, some dollar outflows would facilitate orderly
currency movements, allowing Chinese corporates to hedge and extinguish their dollar liabilities and the official sector to trim its dollar assets.
McCauley et al (2015) estimate that the dollar
debts of Chinese corporations could exceed
US$1.1 trillion. Shifting currency expectations
owing to a mighty US dollar, a narrower expected
policy interest rate differential because of monetary policy divergence between China and the US,
and possibly higher currency volatility given a
less interventionist PBC, have combined to result
in a lower Sharpe ratio. This in turn could prompt
some unwinding of Chinese corporate carry trade
to be funded in part by orderly draw-down of the
official reserves.
BRU EGE L
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policy-induced. First, a cooler Chinese property
sector from 2013 has significantly slowed proceeds from land sales, which mostly accrue to
local governments. Indeed, some localities might
face up the new stark reality of diminished availability of land for sales. Nationwide, the growth of
government land sale proceeds plummeted from
40 percent year-on-year in the first quarter of
2014, to 26 percent in the second quarter, 17 percent in the third and merely 3 percent in the final
quarter. The first quarter of 2015 even witnessed
a plunge of 43 percent.
Second, to strengthen the fiscal discipline facing
local governments, the policy of the central Chinese government has been to gradually tighten
the budget constraints on local governments, by
curtailing their borrowing via various financing
vehicles, demanding greater transparency and
disclosure of local fiscal conditions, and enhancing regulation of shadow banking.
These two factors have nevertheless combined
and reinforced to translate into a de facto, sizable
but necessary fiscal contraction, which may not
be fully offset by a slightly more expansionary
2015 official budget. This fiscal tightening most
likely shows up as weaker local investment
expenditure, whatever the official proactive fiscal
policy means. Thus the overall de-facto Chinese
fiscal policy stance might still be somewhat contractionary and at best neutral in 2015, calling for
reasonable monetary relaxation to partially offset
the possible contractionary effects of reduced
local government borrowing on the economy.
Although concerns over fiscal dominance remain
real, tighter monetary policy simply is not a credible response to the risks of moral hazard and soft
budget constraints on Chinese local governments.
On the contrary, monetary accommodation should
help mitigate the contractionary impact of the currently tighter local government budgetary constraints in the short term and facilitate gradual
restoration of fiscal discipline and rebalancing of
the central and local fiscal resource and responsibility over the longer term.
In sum, both the insights from the FlemingMundell model and the need to mitigate contractionary impact of the tighter local government
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from which to accelerate financial liberalisation.
By contrast, simultaneously maintaining both
tight monetary and fiscal policy as an ill-advised
tactic to force through tough reform programmes
could be counterproductive, if not reckless.
Third, a timely monetary relaxation should help
cushion an orderly slowdown of the Chinese economy, in turn facilitating the structural rebalancing
task. The credit binge witnessed during the GFC
was partially the consequence of the unmistakably late monetary policy response to the concurrently collapsing domestic and external
demand at that time. And this rapid credit expansion mostly funded local government investment,
likely worsening the domestic imbalances. Moreover, most of the credit allocation and industrial
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