China's Growth Evolution: Opportunities and Challenges for the Global Economy

China's economic landscape is undergoing a profound transformation, marked by significant shifts in its growth engines. The evolving composition of China’s economic drivers is likely to have long-term implications for global economies and asset markets, necessitating a re-evaluation of which sectors and asset classes stand to gain or lose from these shifts.

The country’s aggregate growth beta – a measure of its economic sensitivity or correlation to global growth – is declining. This trend mirrors Japan's experience in the 1990s and early 2000s, characterized by debt accumulation, ageing demographics, and a real estate bust (see Figure 1).

While we expect China’s growth beta to continue declining, similar to Japan’s trend in the 1990s, this does not diminish its importance in the global macroeconomic environment or financial markets. As the world’s second-largest economy, it retains dominant positions in global trade and commodity markets.

Figure 1: While China’s GDP growth beta decline echoes Japan’s experience in the 1990s, it retains the second-largest share of global GDP

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Four key trends driving China’s growth over the secular horizon

We have identified four key trends that are set to drive China’s growth over the next three to five years:

  1. Credit growth reduction: The size and composition of China's credit impulse (the change in new credit issued as a percentage of GDP) are changing. Historically, credit growth has been a major driver of China's economic expansion, which has often been countercyclical and volatile. However, structural changes are expected to temper future credit growth. The central leadership, increasingly aware of the risks associated with high leverage, is curbing debt growth, particularly at the local government level. Additionally, declining profitability in the banking sector has reduced its capacity to support the same level of credit growth as in the past.
  2. Property sector contraction: Once a major engine of growth, the property sector is now a secular drag. We expect ageing demographics and significant overbuilt inventories to keep real estate investment and new starts weak. This decline in the property sector will have profound implications for both domestic and global markets, given that it has historically been a significant consumer of commodities, particularly iron ore, and a driver of economic activity.
  3. Increased manufacturing capacity: China is increasing its manufacturing capacity, shifting from a surplus in property construction to a surplus in manufacturing production. Unlike the property surplus, this new manufacturing surplus is being exported, making it a global challenge rather than just China's. The government's policy direction has been heavily focused on the supply side, with less emphasis on demand-side stimulus. This could lead to economic imbalances, with early signs of rapid capacity expansion in sectors such as electronic equipment and vehicle production aimed at gaining cost advantages. This shift is already intensifying competition with other advanced exporter countries for market share.
  4. Green energy investment: Investment in green energy is ramping up, signaling a shift towards sustainability and self-sufficiency. This trend will have varied implications for different sectors, particularly commodities. The rise in "green demand” for metals such as copper, aluminium, and nickel introduces a new dynamic, potentially offsetting the decline in traditional demand driven by the property sector's slowdown.