Chinese offshore purchases suggest economic fatigue
The Fisher and Paykel share purchase is a consistent Chinese trend. Yet as they buy overseas assets they are subtly showing not how strong their economy is, but its inherent weakness.
The Fisher and Paykel share purchase is a consistent Chinese trend. Yet as they buy overseas assets they are subtly showing not how strong their economy is, but its inherent weakness.
It is almost a reflexive negative public reaction in New Zealand whenever a Chinese company buys an otherwise proud New Zealand business.
The North Island’s controversial dairy farms and this week’s Fisher and Paykel Appliance purchases are just two recent examples.
The circulating rumour is that China is buying up large and slowly taking over the world. Beijing certainly seems to be flush with cash from years of strong export profits and is ready to throw those funds into investments.
But why do they not like to invest domestically? This trend of capital flight reveals a less-than-optimistic attitude among China’s elites about the country’s financial future and its ability to safeguard their assets.
Chinese exports increased 2.7% year-on-year to $US177.97 billion in August, up from 1% in July, according to data released on September 10 by the General Administration of Customs. A slowdown in these indicators may point to a larger problem China is facing economically.
Japanese once feared too
It is within living memory that the Japanese behemoth caused similar levels of fear as it bought huge foreign companies and property.
Tokyo knew in the 1980s what the rest of us didn’t. If it were to invest domestically it would lose everything because the Japanese economy was in a bubble.
When it started to collapse in spectacular fashion it was clear Japanese investors understood the inherent weaknesses of their economy.
China has bought many assets in the United States, such as property in Pebble Beach, the Bank of East Asia USA, located in New York City, and American whiteware manufacturer Maytag.
It was Fisher and Paykel’s new shareholder Haier which made the crucial offer of $US16 a share to buy Maytag in 2005.
The cripplingly low price at which manufacturing or services can be provided has been termed “the China price”. Other countries and companies simply can’t compete with it if they wish to make a profit.
This term could also apply, in the inverse, to the way Chinese firms are buying well-known companies around the world at a much higher price than they are valued, and are so quick to do so.
Daniel Gross of Slate magazine explained in 2005 that buying an established American whiteware company carries the added bonus of a well-known and trusted brand name.
For a new entrant, especially a Chinese company, breaking into a target market in a foreign country is incredibly difficult. It is much simpler to buy into a reliable brand like Fisher and Paykel or Maytag.
Below the surface worry of sending important intellectual and agrarian property overseas to a largely opaque country lies a deeper question about the reasons why China is investing heavily in foreign countries and not domestically.
Some have pointed to the looming point where its economy will outpace America's, as if these numbers somehow prove Chinese predominance. If this economic success exposes anything it is that China’s miracle growth is unsustainable and probably short term.
A billion living in poverty
This is because China is saddled with a billion people living in poverty, most in conditions only experienced in sub-Saharan Africa. The US is not experiencing poverty anywhere near these levels.
What is likely a blip on the American economic radar in terms of growth is equally anomalous for China. Beijing understands the importance of moving away from a GDP growth-oriented economy.
To continue this growth China must invest more than it consumes. Beijing is struggling to do so because of a lack of quality domestic businesses and poor Chinese consumption.
So cripplingly cheap have Chinese exports been, and so strong has Beijing’s policy of vigorous lending practises been for citizens, that they have to turn to foreign investments simply as a store of wealth.
As it develops, China is investing less at home and consuming more as living standards increase in the rich coastal regions.
The dilemma for Beijing is balancing the inflationary pressures of lending with the threatened social instability resulting from high unemployment rates if that funding dries up.
They usually riot
Unemployed, hungry people do not author civilised letters to their mayors, they usually riot.
Beijing lives in constant fear of civil instability that it suppresses it by supplying cheap lending rates to small and medium Chinese enterprises. These loans are almost always non-performing.
China is also feeling less competitive globally as other developing nation’s cheaper goods and services begin to rival them. Simply put, China is not the only country competent enough to deliver quality services and high-tech goods at a cheap price.
It is unclear whether the rising Chinese middle class, which is consuming 25% of luxury goods by some estimates, can be domestically satisfied with local manufacturing. Chinese industry relies on export capital for survival because its profit margins are so low – in some areas consistently running at a loss.
In this context, the Fisher and Paykel share purchase is a consistent Chinese trend. Yet as they buy overseas assets they are subtly showing not how strong their economy is, but its inherent weakness.
Chinese double-digit growth rates were impossible to maintain indefinitely and are falling as the economy contracts dangerously.
The widening prosperity gap created by the Chinese elites through offshore investment decisions will further restrain the ability of the country’s poor and middle class to develop.
Nathan Smith has studied international relations and conflict at Massey University. He blogs at INTEL and Analysis