World Financial Crisis and China

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World Financial Crisis and World Financial Crisis and China China Professor Shujie Yao SCCS amd GEP University of Nottingham

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World Financial Crisis and China. Professor Shujie Yao SCCS amd GEP University of Nottingham. World Financial Crisis and China Introduction: overview Evolution of crisis Policy methods China in the crisis Implications on world geo-political economy Key conclusions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of World Financial Crisis and China

Page 1: World Financial Crisis and  China

World Financial Crisis and World Financial Crisis and China China

Professor Shujie Yao

SCCS amd GEPUniversity of Nottingham

Page 2: World Financial Crisis and  China

World Financial Crisis and China

Introduction: overviewEvolution of crisisPolicy methodsChina in the crisisImplications on world geo-political

economyKey conclusions

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Introduction: overview

• Deepest crisis since 1930’s

• Starting from richest nations: US, EU and Japan

• Affecting all countries

• Spectacular failures of banks, insurance companies

• Unprecedented rescue efforts in human history

• Significant rebalancing of world power

• China benefits

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Causes of crisis

Long period of world growth 1992-2007

Structural failure in the West

Greed, complexity and opaqueness in

banking/finance

Mismanagement of inflation-interest rates by

central banks

Energy and materials crisis

State vs market: invisible hand no panacea

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Trade balances of UK, US and China ($ billion)

Sources: Official statistics of three countries

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Evolution of crisisEvolution of crisis

2004-7 Rising interests in US & Europe

2006 on Falling US house prices

Aug 07 Sub-prime losses hit banks

2007-8 Banking system meltdown

Jan-Jul 08 Surging oil & commodity prices

2008 Contagion to all countries

Sep 08 Stock market collapses

May 08 Rescue actions from US, EU, Japan, China

April 09G20 London

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New York -34%

London -31%

Paris -43%

Frankfurt -40%

Mumbai -52%

Singapore -49%

Sydney -41%

Hong Kong -48%

Shanghai -65%

Tokyo -42%

Table 1: World stock markets 2008

Sources: Danny Quah (2009) 'Will Asia save the world?' The World Economy Asia Lecture presented in January 2009, Kuala Lumpur, Leverhulme Centre GEP, Nottingham.

Falling share prices in the world

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Colossal losses of giant banks & other MNCs

• US: Lehman Brothers, Citigroup, AIG, GM, etc.• UK: RBS, HBOS (Lloyds)

Example 1: AIGLosses: Q4, 08 = $61.7 bil; total loss from 07 = $100 bil.• Market value: from over $150 bil to $1.2 bil.• Covering: $2 tril products, of w, $1 tril insuring 12 large banks 94% of Fortune 500 properties • Government rescue: $150 bil, could go $250 bil.• Bonus $165 mil a peanut in good days, but huge anger today

Example 2: RBS• Losses: 2008 = £24 bil (cost of ABN AMRO, £11 bil)• £324 bil toxic assets out of £1 trillion (80% overseas)• Share price: High £7 (Jan 07), low £0.1 (Jan 09)

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GDP growth by quarter 2007Q1 – 2009Q1 (%)

Sources: Official statistics of three countries

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Sharp contraction in prices, productionAnd services

• Industrial production (e.g. UK -6% in Feb 2009)

• FDI (world FDI -24% in 2008)

• House construction/sales (-50% in UK and US)

• Car production/sales (-40% in UK and US)

• House prices (-18% in US 2008, -16% in UK 2008)

• Unemployment rate: US 8.1%, UK 2m and still rising

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Volumes of trade 2007Q1 – 2009Q1 ($ billion)

Sources: Official statistics of three countries

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Response to crisis

• Sharp drop in interest rates

• Bailouts of failing giant banks & other MNCs

(e.g., Citigroup, AIG, RBS, Lloyds-HBOS)

• Stimulus packages to boost outputs

(e.g. China RBM 4 trillion, US, $787 billion, UK up to £20 billion)

• Quantitative easing (UK, £125 billion, US $1.2 trillion, March 2009)

• Global efforts (G20, end of 2008, 2 April 2009: $1.1 trillion)

Notes: (1) US $1.2 billion on 18/3/09: $0.3 tril on Treasuries,

$0.75 tril mortgage-back securities, $0.1 tril Freddie Mac.

(2) This package follows the $787 bil package in Feb. 09 which

Included tax cuts, infrastructure and aids to states.

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Rescue efforts in the UK

• VAT from 17.5% to 15% for one year

• Interest rate drops from 5% Oct 08 to 0.5% March 09

• Stamp duty exempt threshold £60,000 to £175,000

• Nationalisation of Banks

Northern Rock (100%), RBS (70%), Lloyds (63%)

• Toxic assets insurance (RBS, £325 billion, Lloyds £260 billion)

• Quantitative Easing (£125 billion in H1 2009, may up if necessary)

Notes: How bad is the UK economy? (1) unemployment 2m March 09,

Expected to 3m end of 2009, or 10%. (2) House and stock market

Values drops £1.9 trillion, or £40,000 per adult. (3) Mortgage lending

Drops 50% from Jan 08 to Jan 09. (4) GDP to decline by 3.5%-4.3% in 2009.

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G20 Concerted Rescue Efforts

• Concerted domestic stimulus efforts

• Preventing trade protectionism

• G20 in London 2 April 2009: $1.1 trillion ($500 billion

to IMF, SDR 250 billion issued by IMF for trade credits,

$1 billion for poor nations)

• China, Japan and Korea: Asian Fund $86 billion

($38.4 by China and Japan each, and $19.2 by Korea)

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The latest development in May 2009

• EU, Japan, US will contract sharply in 2009 and recover in 2010

• UK and other DCs: U-shape

• China & India, V-shape

• Stock markets have seen their worst over in March 2009

Lowest May 09 Change (%) Dow Jones 6400 (Mar 09) 8500 + 33 FTSE100 3400 (Mar 09) 4500 + 32 Shanghai 1600 (Nov 08) 2600 + 63

• Banking sector stability Stress test for 19 US banks and Barclay Share prices of most banks and resource companies rose 4 times from their lowest points seen in January-March 2009

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China in the crisis environment

• China hit hard but much less than its competitors

Bank reforms 1998-2006 pays dividends

China’s economic fundamentals strong

High growth/savings

Low deficit and strong state revenue

High foreign exchange reserves

Swift government action

• Nonetheless, GDP-Trade-FDI-Employment-Production hit hard

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Long term implications on China and the world economy

• Re-balancing of geo-eco-political power: West to East

• China and India are big winners, esp, China

• New global financial regulatory system

• Preventing and coping with future crisis

• Technology and environment

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China becomes the biggest winner

• Catching up with Japan and the US more quickly

• More influential on world economy and politics

• Benefiting from low prices of oil and raw materials

• Moving up the technological ladder

• Reducing regional inequalities

• Becoming aware of potential future crisis

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US Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities ($bil)

Country March 2009 March 2008 Change % 09/08

China 768 491 36.1

Japan 687 597 13.1

Russia 138 42 69.6

UK 128 200 -56.3

Brazil 127 149 -17.3

Luxenburg 106 90 15.1

HK 79 61 22.8

Taiwan 75 41 45.3

Grand total 3265 2506 23.2 http://www.treas.gov/tic/mfh.txt

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China's Economy in April 2009: sign of recoveryChange from same period last year

GDP 2009 Q1 +6.10%

Exports Jan-April -20.50%

Investments 2009 expected 10 tril RMBTrade surplus Jan-April +32.40%Exports April vs March +6.90%Imports April vs March +15.10%Industrial output Jan-March +4%Industrial output April +7.30%Retail sales April +14.80%Investments 2009 Q1 5 tril RMBInvestments 2009 total 10 tril RMB

People's Daily: 14/5/09, p1; People's Daily, 13/5/2009, p5

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Key conclusions

• Crisis triggered by credit crunch in US from 2007

• Real crisis starting from 3rd Q 2008

• It may last for 2 years, 4 years to recover to 2007 level

• Unprecedented from 1930s

• Affecting all countries: DCs and LDCs

• DCs hit harder than LDCs

• Rebalancing world power: China biggest winner

• Future crisis possible due to globalisation

• Imperative to learn lessons, esp, China and India