With Covid-19 Under Control, China's Economy Surges Ahead
By: Keith Bradsher - The New York Times

Exports jumped and local governments engaged in a binge of debt-fueled construction projects.
Even consumer spending is finally recovering.

A shopping area in Beijing during the "Golden Week" public holidays in early October.
After months of coronavirus lockdowns and restrictions, it was the first major holiday for Chinese people
Roman Pilipey/EPA, via Shutterstock
As most of the world still struggles with the coronavirus pandemic , China is showing once again that a fast economic rebound is possible when the virus is brought firmly under control.
The Chinese economy surged 4.9 percent in the July-to-September quarter compared with the same months last year, the country's National Bureau of Statistics announced on Monday. The robust performance brings China almost back up to the roughly 6 percent pace of growth that it was reporting before the pandemic.
Many of the world's major economies have climbed quickly out of the depths of a contraction last spring, when shutdowns caused output to fall steeply. But China is the first to report growth that significantly surpasses where it was at this time last year. The United States and other nations are expected to report a third-quarter surge too, but they are still behind or just catching up to pre-pandemic levels.
China's lead could widen further in the months to come. It has almost no local transmission of the virus now, while the United States and Europe face another accelerating wave of cases.
The vigorous expansion of the Chinese economy means that it is set to dominate global growth — accounting for at least 30 percent of the world's economic growth this year and in the years to come, Justin Lin Yifu, a cabinet adviser and honorary dean of the National School of Development at Peking University, said at a recent government news conference in Beijing.
Chinese companies are making up a greater share of the world's exports, manufacturing consumer electronics, personal protection equipment and other goods in high demand during the pandemic. At the same time, China is now buying more iron ore from Brazil, more corn and pork from the United States and more palm oil from Malaysia. That has partly reversed a nosedive in commodity prices last spring and softened the impact of the pandemic on some industries.
Still, China's recovery has done less to help the rest of the world than in the past because its imports have not increased nearly as much as its exports. This pattern has created jobs in China but placed a brake on growth elsewhere.
China's economic recovery has also been dependent for months on huge investments in highways, high-speed train lines and other infrastructure. And in recent weeks, the country has seen the beginning of a recovery in domestic consumption.
The affluent and people living in export-oriented coastal provinces were the first to start spending money again. But activity is resuming now even in places like Wuhan, the central Chinese city where the new coronavirus first emerged.
"You've had to line up to get into many restaurants in Wuhan, and for Wuhan restaurants that are popular on the internet, the wait is two or three hours," said Lei Yanqiu, a Wuhan resident in her early 30s.
A restaurant last month in Wuhan, the central
Chinese city where the new coronavirus first emerged.
Hector Retamal/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
George Zhong, a resident of Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan Province in western China, said that he had made trips to three provinces in the past two months and has been actively shopping when he is home. "I spend no less than in previous years," Mr. Zhong said.
China's economic growth in the past three months came in slightly below economists' forecasts of 5.2 percent to 5.5 percent. But the performance was still strong enough that stock markets in Shanghai, Shenzhen and Hong Kong rose in early trading on Monday.
The country's broadening recovery could also be seen in economic statistics just for September, which were also released on Monday. Retail sales climbed 3.3 percent last month from a year ago, while industrial production was up 6.9 percent.
China's model for restoring growth may be effective, but may not be appealing to other countries.
Determined to keep local transmission of the virus at or near zero, China has resorted to comprehensive cellphone tracking of its population, weekslong lockdowns of neighborhoods and cities and costly mass testing in response to even the smallest outbreaks.
ImageShopping at a Gucci store in Sanya, in southeast China. In recent weeks, Chinese consumers have begun to spend again.Credit...Carlos Garcia Rawlins/Reuters
China's rebound also comes with some weaknesses, particularly a jump in overall debt this year by an amount equal to as much as a third of the economy's overall output. Much of the extra debt is either borrowing by local governments and state-owned enterprises to pay for new infrastructure, or mortgages taken out by households and companies to pay for apartments and new buildings.
The government is aware of the risk of letting debt accumulate quickly. But reining in new credit would hurt real estate activity, a sector that represents up to a quarter of the economy.
Another risk to China's recovery is its heavy dependence on exports. The surge in exports in the past three months, along with lower prices for imports of commodities, accounted for a sizable chunk of economic growth. Exports still represent over 17 percent of China's economy, more than double the proportion that they make up in the American economy.
China's leaders recognize that the country's exports are increasingly vulnerable to geopolitical tensions, including the Trump administration's moves to unwind trade relations between the United States and China. Shifts in global demand might also threaten exports, as the pandemic batters overseas economies.
Medical supplies from China were unloaded in June at the Glasgow airport in Scotland.
Jane Barlow/Press Association, via Associated Press
Xi Jinping, China's top leader, has increasingly emphasized self-reliance, a strategy that calls for expanding service industries and innovation in manufacturing, as well as enabling residents to spend more.
"We need to make consumers the mainstay," said Qiu Baoxing, a cabinet adviser who is a former vice minister of housing, at the news conference in Beijing. "By focusing on domestic circulation, we are actually enhancing our own resilience."
But empowering consumers has long been a challenge in China. Under ordinary circumstances, most Chinese are compelled to save for education, health care and retirement because of a weak social safety net. The economic slowdown, and the pandemic, have meant lost jobs, compounding the problem, particularly for low earners and rural residents.
Beijing's approach to helping ordinary Chinese during the slowdown has been to provide companies with tax rebates and large loans from state-owned banks, so that businesses would not need to lay off workers. But some economists argue that Beijing should instead be handing out coupons or checks to more directly assist the country's poorer citizens.
Millions of Chinese migrant workers endured at least a month or two of unemployment in the spring as factories were slow to reopen after the epidemic. Young Chinese found themselves dipping into their savings to eat or taking on second jobs to make up for slashed wages.
But Chinese government economists are wary of providing direct payments to consumers. They say that the government's priorities are investment-driven growth and measures to improve productivity and quality of life, such as digging new sewerage systems or adding elevators to three million older apartment towers that lack them.
In another sign of robust consumer demand, a crowd
lined up at dawn on Friday on Nanjing Road in Shanghai
and waited for three hours to buy a limited edition of
Nike athletic shoes.
Keith Bradsher/The New York Times
"We've seen a lot of suggestions to increase consumption, but the crux is to enrich people first," said Yao Jingyuan, a former chief economist of the National Bureau of Statistics who is now a policy researcher for the cabinet.
Western governments have experimented with providing extra-large unemployment checks, one-time payments and even subsidized meals at restaurants. These payments have been aimed at helping families sustain a minimum standard of living through the pandemic — which in turn has fueled demand for imports from China.
The widening of the trade surplus — in which the increase in exports exceeded the growth in imports — represented 0.6 percentage points of the 4.9 percent economic growth, an official said on Monday. Consumption and investment in China accounted for the rest.
"On the whole, China's economy was primarily driven by domestic demand," Liu Aihua, a spokeswoman for the National Bureau of Statistics, said at a news conference in Beijing.
But Michael Pettis, a finance professor at Peking University, said that as people in other countries supported by government subsidies continue to turn to China for products during the pandemic, "we're going to see a resurgence of trade conflict, and not just U.S.-China, but global."

I don't know Bob, all of the information comes from Commies and is probably untrustworthy ( /s)
although the link the the WSJ from the other version of this seed which is locked,
claims the Chinese economy is "supercharged" by sales of Medical equipment and "work from home items"
being sold to the USA.
Not sure what to believe.
Maybe it's the nearly universal acceptance of wearing masks in public.../s
I don't think that's really a joke. I think it's deadly serious.
I agree.
Deadly serious AND EFFECTIVE.
China has resorted to comprehensive cellphone tracking of its population, weekslong lockdowns of neighborhoods and cities and costly mass testing in response to even the smallest outbreaks.
I doubt that such tactics would work in countries where the people enjoy basic freedoms, such as the US.
Greg... the NSA has been listening to whomever they please, for decades.
It is sometimes hard to dig through data, but accepting the numbers from China indicate a year end 1.9% y/y improvement from end of 2019. We always need to keep in mind the difference between annualized numbers and actual numbers.
Not sure the USA can recover completely in that timeframe, as as consensus is building of about 29% (annualized) improvement in 3rd quarter GDP at the 3rd qtr release on 10/29/2020. Just in time for the final weekend before election. (yay! to final weekend.) As stellar as that number is, it would still require a near 10% annualized 4th quarter to break even on the year. It will likely take 1st quarter of 2021 to fully recover, based on the consensus, which would require another hefty stimulus package by end of this year.
I am expecting 24.5% annualized for 3rd quarter. Going further depends on size and scope of stimulus package, if any.
Both Ford and GM saw a substantial sales increase in the 3rd quarter in the China market. 25% and 12% respectively.
Tesla's 3rd quarter sales also saw increased sales.
This may be somewhat of an indicator of China's economy gaining strength.
Yay Buick!
With the years, I've come to appreciate quiet comfort.
China is now also concentrating more energy on its own domestic consumption.
The article in the link is quite interesting and explains China's new worldview.
That's as may be... but at least China's government is taking an "expert" look at the situation (unlike a certain other major nation that operates on gut-feelings), and has the capacity to direct the economy in whatever direction it chooses.
In China, the three steps in this order created the success that is reported, much of which, for the edification of the doubters and propagandists, I have seen with my own eyes.
1. An effective lockdown, with compliance adhered to because of a cultural tradition of ''the good of the community" being more important to the individual than the individual's own rights and freedoms.
2. A reving up and full operation of industry and manufacturing.
3. Consumer spending.
Don't believe the Trump-supporters that China is lying about things being pretty well back to normal here. I'm seeing it with my own eyes.