How Beijing’s overmanagement is doing China’s economy and businesses more harm than good
- Disruptive policies in environmental regulation and debt management, for example, hurt investor confidence, stymie reforms and contribute to China’s economic slowdown. For long-term stable growth, Beijing needs to get out of its own way
China’s economic growth is expected to have slowed to just over 6 per cent, and it is unlikely to accelerate any time soon. In fact, analysts generally agree that China’s economic performance last year – its worst in nearly 30 years – could be its best for at least the next decade.
What observers cannot seem to agree on is how worried China should be, or what policymakers can do to improve growth prospects.
Optimists point out that, given the size of China’s economy today, even a 6 per cent growth in gross domestic product translates into larger gains than double-digit growth 25 years ago.
Long-term growth depends on the decentralisation of government authority, increased marketisation and greater economic liberalisation, with the private sector gaining far more access to finance and other factors of production.