https://www.oftwominds.com/blogoct21/China-crash10-21.html
Will China Pop the Global Everything Bubble? Yes
That China faces structural problems is well-recognized. The list of articles in the August issue of Foreign Affairs dedicated to China reflects this:
Xi's Gamble: the Race to Consolidate Power and Stave Off Disaster
China's Economic Reckoning: The Price of Failed Reforms
The Robber Barons of Beijing: Can China Survive its Gilded Age?
Life of the Party: How Secure Is the CCP? (Chinese Communist Party)
These are thorny, difficult issues: a demographic cliff resulting
from the one-child policy, soaring wealth-income inequality, pervasive
corruption, public health issues (diabesity, etc.), environmental damage
and a slowing economy.
What the conventional analysts do not fully grasp, in my view, are
1) the existential threat to the CCP and China's economy posed by its
unprecedented, metastasizing credit-asset bubble and 2) its incipient
energy crisis.
As I explained in a recent blog post,
What's Really Going On in China?, the CCP and the government
informally institutionalized moral hazard (the disconnection of risk and
consequence) as a core economic policy.
Every financial loss, no matter how risky or debt-ridden, was covered by
the state (via bail-out, refinancing debt, new loans, etc.) as a "cost
of rapid development," a reflection of the view that some inefficiency
and waste was inevitable in the rapid development of industry, housing,
infrastructure and a consumer economy.
What China's leaders did not fully understand was this implicit
guarantee of bail-outs--the equivalent of "The Fed has our
backs"--incentivized debt-funded speculation as the lowest-risk,
highest-return "investment," especially when compared to low-profit,
risky investments in low-margin export industries. (Recall the average
profit margins of Chinese exporting enterprises is 1% to 3%.)
This is the hidden driver of China's sagging productivity and
economy: debt in all sectors is skyrocketing to fund speculation, not
productivity.
This institutionalization of moral hazard has incentivized the least productive and highest-risk gambles--not
just for large conglomerates like EverGrande, but for middle-class
households who've invested in the shadow-banking system (unregulated
private-sector pools of capital lent out to risky borrowers at high
rates of interest) and bought second, third and fourth "investment"
flats.
The contradictions in this mass investing of savings in empty condos are systemic and dangerous:
1) once a flat is rented, it loses value due to being "used" and 2) the
vast majority of the market for "investment" flats is illiquid, as most
new buyers want a new flat, not an old one, so the market for old flats
is extremely thin outside the most desirable inner rings of Beijing and
Shanghai.
This mass investment in illiquid empty flats has generated social and financial perversities:
now that flats in desirable areas cost 30-40 times an average
white-collar salary, young people must vacuum up the entire extended
family's savings in order to afford a flat. Those young men who are
unable to buy a flat find their marriages prospects are dismal.
One result of the marriage of state control and private-sector Wild-West speculation is a truly vast wealth-income divide
that is bound up with corruption in a mutually reinforcing feedback:
the richer you become, the closer to power you get, and vice versa.
Since China's informal shadow-banking system is opaque even to state
regulators, it's quite possible that China's leaders do not have a full
grasp of the extent of systemic risk bound up in the excesses of shadow
banking. To paraphrase Donald Rumsfeld's famous dictum, this is an
unknown unknown for China's policy makers.
This truly monumental accumulation of debt and speculation is now an existential threat to the Party on two levels:
1) since all bubbles pop regardless of any other conditions, when this
bubble pops, the economic blow will be severe enough to threaten the
Party's control of the economy
2) the crushing of phantom wealth will cause people to seek a scapegoat,
and the Party is Target #1 since it coddled the well-connected and
wealthy but did not protect the 99% from the dire consequences of the
bubble bursting.
Having engineered the bubble's expansion by creating mountains of debt
and implicit promises of bail-outs, the CCP and government have backed
themselves into a corner: there is no pain-free way to deflate a
speculative bubble of such astounding proportions.
Considering the life history of President Xi (especially his first-hand
experience of the Cultural Revolution 1966-1976), his writings and his
consolidation of power, it is very clear to me that Xi understands the
bubble is close to escaping his control and so time is short and the
policy options are limited to triage, that is, saving the healthiest and
letting Nature take care of those closest to expiring.
I also see evidence that Xi grasps the absolute need to break the
near-universal confidence that the state will bail out everyone who
borrows and speculates so wildly that their gambles go bad.
The general assumption is that "China can't afford to let Evergrande
fail" because this enormous conglomerate will obviously topple many
dominoes, generating great financial pain.
I think the that President Xi's view is the opposite: "we can't afford to bail out Evergrande" because that would open the floodgates of moral hazard that Xi is trying to close.
The state bailing out private-sector gamblers (and state-owned
enterprises) is what led to the massive moral hazard-debt bubble that Xi
is determined to pop now while he still can control the process.
In other words, President Xi understands this is the do-or-die moment
to regain control of an out-of-control moral hazard driven financial
bubble, and the only way to do so is to push the losses onto
everyone with exposure, the driver being the stark choice to either
regain control by popping the bubble now or letting it expand and
implode in an uncontrolled (and hence Party-threatening) fashion.
Xi concluded that the first step to being able to push the losses onto
everyone with exposure to speculative bets was to consolidate power to
such a degree that the usual self-interested factions that would use
their power to evade the consequences could be forced to accept their
share of the losses.
Given the history and structure of the Party, this required Xi to extend his control to levels not seen since Deng or Mao.
In my view, Xi correctly concluded the hour was getting late and the
institutional resistance to the end of the implicit promises of state
bailouts and endless debt expansion could only be overcome if his
political power was near-absolute.
The popping of moral hazard and the debt-speculation bubble are necessary to preserve CCP and state power; half-measures that protected corrupt cronies would only increase the public's outrage when the bubble finally burst.
In this light, Xi's multi-year campaign against the most visible
corruption and his recent touting of "common prosperity" have set the
stage for his forcing the end of moral hazard and the controlled
demolition of the excesses of debt and speculation that have harmed the
economy and threatened the control of the CCP.
Now comes the grand ironies. China's ability to generate
stupendous amounts of new debt basically bailed out the global economy
in 2008-09, 2015-16 and 2020. Yes, the Federal Reserve bailed out the
global banking sector (to the tune of $16 trillion in backstops and
credit lines) in 2008-09 and inflated a speculative bubble in the U.S.
by creating $3.5 trillion in quantitative easing, but China's
expansion of debt was an equally important source of global demand,
which is what stopped global economies from sinking into recession.
The cost of these "saves" were not understood at the time: the elevation
of moral hazard to quasi-religious status in the U.S. and China and
the expansion of debt-funded speculative bubbles to unprecedented
heights.
There are only two policy options:
1) Grasp the nettle and refuse to bail out debt-funded speculative excesses, thereby popping the Everything Bubble, or
2) play the game of keeping the bubble expanding until it implodes on
its own, an end-game made inevitable by the systemic instabilities
intrinsic to bubbles.
Xi has correctly chosen Policy #1, and to do so has positioned
the Party as the defender of the people, i.e. anti-corruption, shackling
the Big Tech billionaires like Jack Ma, and announcing that the state
will not bail out EverGrande.
The Federal Reserve and the political leadership of the U.S. have foolishly chosen Policy #2,
inflating the bubble while letting the consequences of this moral
hazard bubble--wealth-income inequality and corruption--explode higher,
fatally undermining the credibility of both the Fed and America's
political class.
As the supply chain disruptions have revealed, the global economy and financial system are tightly bound systems, and as such are extraordinarily exposed to the risks of cascading collapses as key nodes become chokepoints or break down.
While the Federal Reserve prints trillions to further inflate the
bubble, the global energy shortages are already crippling key sectors in
the economies of China and the EU. Reality is about to intrude on the
Fed's fantasy that speculative bubbles can remain disconnected from the
real-world economy forever.
In summary: the popping of the global Everything Bubble is not Xi's
goal; it is the inevitable second-order effect (collateral damage) of
China's debt-speculation bubble popping.
Given the tightly-bound financial system, the collapse of EverGrande is
far more the story of dominoes toppling rather than direct losses: it's
not the direct losses that will bring down the global financial system,
it's the dominoes toppling as those who take the direct losses implode
and become insolvent, missing their loan/bond payments, being unable to
meet their counterparty obligations, and so on.
The consensus in the West is that China cannot afford to let its bubble pop because the pain will be so severe. Those who believe this have a poor grasp of Chinese history, especially in the 20th century.
If crashing China's bubble is the nuclear option, Xi has reason to be
confident he can push the pain level to 11 and most will accept it, and
those who don't will join Jack Ma in forced retirement.
I reckon Xi views ending moral hazard and popping the bubble in China as a situation that will
only get worse the longer he puts it off.
The grand irony now is that rather than saving the global economy by
expanding its own debt bubble, China will pop the global Everything
Bubble. To state the obvious, being a linchpin in the global economy
makes China a consequential domino. Anyone who thinks the Fed's
speculative bubble in the U.S. can magically become immune to the
collapse of tightly-bound dominoes is indulging in magical thinking.
China's extreme excesses of debt and speculation are already unraveling,
and Xi is backed into a corner. There is no cost-free escape, only
triage, and Xi has charted a path to preserve the Party's control by
forcing everyone with exposure to absorb the inevitable losses when
unprecedented bubbles pop.
The line of toppling dominoes extends around the entire global economy and financial system. Plan accordingly.
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