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Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

China's advantage to avoid 'Japan syndrome'

By Yao Yang (China Daily) Updated: 2015-09-15 08:16

China's advantage to avoid 'Japan syndrome'

A female Chinese worker handles production of yarn to be exported at a garment factory in Huaibei city, East China's Anhui province, July 1, 2015. [Photo/IC]

China seems to be in the same position, economically speaking, that Japan was in the early 1970s. Japan relied heavily on exports to register extraordinary growth in the 1950s and 1960s. But its rapid growth was halted by the 1973 oil crisis, which also had a devastating effect on the world market. During the next decades, Japan's GDP grew 3.4 percent a year, barely 40 percent of the average rate it had achieved in the 20 years before the oil crisis. And when its real estate bubble burst in 1993, Japan's GDP began a long period of virtually zero growth, with its domestic price levels declining secularly.

Analysts often associate the "Japan syndrome" to the country's exports-led growth model and demographic changes. Dependence on exports made Japan vulnerable to the shocks suffered by the world market, because the savings accumulated through exports were the source of its real estate bubbles.

In terms of demographics, Japan's labor supply reached its peak in 1993, after which it started sliding toward an aging society; in fact, it now has the highest proportion of aged people. One of the dire consequences of Japan's aging society is the continuous decline in its domestic demand.

China, too, followed an exports-led growth model for faster economic development. Like the 1973 oil crisis, the 2008 global financial crisis dealt a major blow to the world economy. As a result, China's export-oriented growth has decelerated since. And like in Japan in the late 1980s, the exports-led high rate of savings have contributed to China's real estate and stock market bubbles.

Moreover, China's demographic change is ahead of Japan by 20 years in terms of the two countries' per capita GDP. China's per capita GDP today is equivalent to that of Japan in the early 1970s, but China's labor supply has already begun to decline. In 10 to 15 years, China's baby-boom generation, those born between 1963 and 1976, will exit the labor market. Thus the Chinese economy could suffer the same fate as that of Japan.

However, China has one advantage, though, that is, it has a population 10 times that of Japan and an even larger territory. For one thing, the per capita GDP of China's nine coastal provinces/cities is twice as much as that of the inland provinces. As such, the force of convergence will ensure the inland provinces continue to grow even if the coastal region stops growing.

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