China needs to build on what it has achieved, but it needs new thinking to do it
One of the things that makes China unique in the annals of economic history is the fact that it opened up to the world at the beginning of its wave of economic development. This is in sharp contrast to other Asian countries, such as Japan and the Republic of Korea, which largely shielded their domestic markets from the outside world until after they were well down the path to becoming developed economies.
Deng Xiaoping famously observed in December 1978 that “Engels never flew in an airplane; Stalin never wore Dacron”. His thinking recognized that China’s economic development would need to be based on access to new technologies.
An important source of those new technologies and ideas was Deng’s decision to allow multinational companies to come and invest in China and to import technologies from overseas.
This opening-up proved to be one of the most decisive factors in driving China’s modern economic rise.
China’s opening-up started gradually. In the 1980s and 1990s, it began experimenting with opening up to foreign investment in selected coastal cities and in special economic zones. The focus was on attracting export-oriented manufacturing which laid the foundation for the country to become a manufacturing powerhouse.
Global supply chains
In 1978 when the country began to reform and open up, it accounted for less than 1 percent of global exports of goods. Over the next 40 years, China’s share grew continuously, accelerating around the time of its entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001. Today China accounts for almost one-fourth of all global manufacturing output by value. As its capabilities have developed, it has also become a much more important contributor to global supply chains.
Initially, most of the manufacturing activities involved the assembly of low-value products, such as garments and toys. Even 15 years ago only about half the value-added in China’s exports was created in China; half was embedded in parts and components that China had imported and assembled. Today the percentage of value added in China is estimated at more than two-thirds.
The foreign companies that have come to China have made an important contribution to this transformation in its capability to add value to the products and services it makes in huge volumes. According to the former State Administration for Industry and Commerce, almost 500,000 foreign-funded companies have been established in China with their cumulative investment stock reaching nearly $5 trillion. The foreign companies have brought new technologies and new skills; they have trained Chinese staff in new techniques; and they have helped develop a huge ecosystem of capable subcontractors and suppliers spanning every province in China.
The Chinese economy, consumers and workers have gained enormously from the policy of opening-up started by Deng and continued by his successors. With many new ideas and technologies flowing in from abroad, the Chinese embracehem, mastered them and then started to add their own ideas and innovations to further improve what they had learned from other countries. Without opening-up, which stimulated this positive cycle of learning and innovation among the Chinese, China would never have been able to achieve so much so quickly.
Of course, multinational companies and consumers overseas have also greatly benefited from China’s rise. Plenty of multinationals are doing well in the country. One of the great examples has been Volkswagen AG, the largest and earliest international partner in China’s automotive industry.
Foreigners’ success stories
Volkswagen entered China as early as in 1978 and has retained the leading position in the Chinese automotive market over the past three decades. China is Volkswagen’s largest market. Rapidly growing sales in the country allowed Volkswagen to overtake Toyota to become the world’s best-selling automaker for the first time. In 2017, it sold more than 3 million vehicles in China, accounting for almost half its global unit sales.
The pattern is repeated for many other foreign carmakers: Ford typically generates one-third of its global profits in China; for General Motors and BMW the figure is around one-fourth. China has also contributed to multinational companies’ success in many other industries, from machinery and equipment right through to fast food. For example, before its recent split, Yum Brands, which owns fastfood outlets such as KFC and Pizza Hut, earned more than half its global profits in China.
Foreign consumers, too, have benefited from China’s rising capabilities and improved productivity, which have enabled them to buy goods at lower prices and enjoy better value for money. In fact, academic research suggests China’s affordable exports have enabled consumers in the United States and Europe to improve their real purchasing power by hundreds, and in some cases thousands, of dollars every year.
Today, however, the decades of positive development and the benefits they have delivered both for China and the global economy are being threatened by the forces of unilateralism and mounting trade protectionism.
So what policies should China pursue going forward?
President Xi Jinping has recently referred to China entering a “new era”. While this is correct, it doesn’t mean the policies should be reversed. Instead, China needs to build on what has gone before. It will also need to incorporate new initiatives. This will require a consistent strategy, implemented through hard work sustained over many years.
From quantity to quality
China’s emphasis will need to shift from simply growth targets to quality of growth. Its rapid expansion in recent decades has brought enormous benefits, but they have come at a cost – notably harm to the environment, rising inequality, a focus on material success rather than quality of life and happiness.
Growth needs to become much more environmentally sustainable, more in tune with preserving the natural world. It will require serious effort and investment to repair yesterday’s environmental damage. It also means that new, improved technologies will have to be used to reduce further damage to the environment – renewable energy, the use of biotechnology to reduce the use of chemicals and improve recycling; a shift to electric vehicles for moving both people and goods. The emphasis will also need to shift from people simply consuming more “things” toward satisfying other demands if the quality of their lives is to improve: better schools and healthcare, cultural experiences and fairer access to courts and the justice system.
China should cooperate even more closely with foreign companies and individuals around the world to complement its home-grown innovations with diverse new ideas, technologies, and aesthetics that arise from the unique and different combinations of resources, history and culture that exist in countries around the world.
Second, China can play a more active, integrated role in the world commensurate with its size and status – home to 20 percent of the world’s population and the second-largest economy (soon to be the first). This means playing a bigger role in global governance, actively supporting international cooperation and global economic integration and helping other countries to develop.
President Xi has also foreshadowed this. One part will involve building infrastructure and promoting trade and development along the Belt and Road routes. But it will also mean combining experiences and ideas from many other countries with China’s own knowledge and strengths. This will require facilitating international dialogue and interaction to open up many more opportunities for working together on innovations with countries with complementary know-how and experience, in order to come up with novel solutions to the big global issues facing all humanity, such as providing for aging populations and fighting climate change.
Productivity essential
Third, to avoid the so-called middle-income trap, China will need to find ways of continuing to increase the productivity of its people, its capital and its resources at a rapid rate. This might prove to be the most difficult challenge of all.
Reform of State-owned enterprises, in particular, will need to continue to improve their efficiency. The private sector will need to be encouraged and helped to improve its value-added and to innovate. New technologies such as artificial intelligence, manufacturing 4.0 and quantum computing will have to be harnessed and developed.
In addition, the financial sector’s capabilities will need to be enhanced. Inefficiencies will need to be reduced, and old policies and procedures that impede the free flow of ideas, money and resources will have to be eliminated.
China has already taken many important steps forward in these areas. Companies such as Alibaba and Tencent, for example, offer payment portals using super-apps that have 90 and 40 functions respectively, far in advance of anything in the rest of the world.
Chinese companies have also become pioneers in the use of big data. Alibaba’s credit scoring system for businesses and consumers, Sesame Credit, for example, updates the score continuously in real time using data that is not only based on financial metrics but on customer returns, customer satisfaction, stock churn and discounting to increase accuracy.
Chinese companies have also used big data analysis for bio-informatics to support, for example, Car-T (Chimeric Antigen Receptor Therapy), which extracts patient’s white blood cells, genetically re-engineers them, and then reinjects them to fight cancers and other diseases.
But the development and application of leading-edge science and technology works best when researchers from diverse countries and backgrounds work together as international teams and companies cooperate in an ecosystem of international partners.
Given the growing pressures to roll back globalization in some parts of the world, this will require China to bravely adopt a new phase of commercial liberalization, which is especially necessary in the areas of research and commercialization of new technologies and in the trade in services.
Further opening up
China is already making some moves in this direction. The Ministry of Commerce and the National Development and Reform Commission have issued a revised Catalogue for the Guidance of Foreign Investment Industries. This opens up foreign investment by adding a number of industries – such as intelligent medical equipment and 3D printing – to the “encouraged” section of the rules.
More important, Premier Li Keqiang has announced that China will further open up its service sector by expanding the pilot program for the innovative development of trade in services, rolling it out in 17 areas, including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, from July 1, 2018, to June 30, 2020.
China’s opening-up and embracing of exchanges with people and countries around the world has played a very important, and sometimes underappreciated, role in China’s impressive economic growth and development over the past 40 years. It can best achieve its ambitious goals for further development and play a more comprehensive role in the global community, commensurate with its size and long history, by embracing a new phase of opening-up.
This will require policies in three areas: Policies that stimulate a new round of both inward and outbound foreign direct investment; policies to develop institutions and mechanisms to enable China to play a more active role in global governance; and policies that energetically pursue reform and deregulation of its industry and commerce to stimulate innovation and productivity improvements, combining technology and ideas from around the world with Chinese know-how.
Based on its past track record, I am confident China will rise to this new challenge, too.
The author is a professor of international management at the University of Cambridge Judge Business School, and a fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge. This article is an excerpt from the upcoming book The Sleeping Giant Awakes, edited by China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessarily reflect those of China Daily.
(China Daily European Weekly 12/14/2018 page10)