107 JAN 7,
2016 5:34 PM EST
By Noah
Smith
Bloomberg
Whatever
the reason for the latest selloff, the big question is what the stock-market
crash means for the Chinese economy. For more than a decade, the Chinese
economy has been the engine of world growth, so if it grinds to a halt,
countries that depend on trade with China may be in for a serious
recession. If the slowdown is only mild, the danger obviously is less ominous.
If a stock
bubble and crash were China ’s
only problems, the danger might not be so great. Research shows that bubbles are less damaging to the real economy when
they mostly involve equity rather than debt. Debt crashes inflict harm on the
financial system, creating major recessions that take years to repair. Equity
crashes, meanwhile, merely reduce paper wealth. A good example of an equity
bubble that wasn't very harmful was the late 1990s U.S. dot-com boom. When it ended,
stock prices were devastated, but the crash led to only the mildest of
recessions.
The problem
with China
is that the stock market crash looks like it's only the most visible sign of a
much deeper and broader distortion in the country's financial markets. Chinese
property prices, while they have fluctuated from year to year, fell steadily in
late 2014 and most of 2015. The long-anticipated deflation of the Chinese
housing market may finally be at hand.
This shadow
banking system has enabled a large buildup of bad debt, much of it related
directly or indirectly to real estate. If property prices fall, trust companies
will go broke, and banks -- having invested in the trust companies -- will be
on the hook. That will create the conditions for a really destructive crash.
In that
case, the stock market gyrations we’ve seen might simply be a sideshow to the
underlying debt-and-housing cycle. China ’s stock markets began to soar
in late 2014, just as property prices began to tumble. Investors may have been
looking for some alternative to the housing market. Those investors probably
pushed prices to unreasonable levels, which in turn likely drew in speculators
looking to ride the wave of momentum. A crash at that point becomes
unavoidable.
So China ’s stock
market might simply be a symptom of something much bigger and more troubling
going on beneath the surface -- the end of a huge property-based debt-fueled
boom. That happened in Japan
in the late 1980s -- the Nikkei 225 bubbled and crashed, but it was the long,
slow, debt-powered rise and fall of the housing market that really undermined
the Japanese financial system.
There is
good reason to be worried about the performance of the Chinese economy. How
much its woes will affect developed economies is another question entirely --
and it's the one everyone wants answered.
This column
does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP
and its owners.
To contact
the author of this story:
Noah Smith
at nsmith150@bloomberg.net
To contact
the editor responsible for this story:
James
Greiff at jgreiff@bloomberg.net
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