The Economist: Shopaholics wanted

Can Asians replace Americans as a driver of global growth?

CFN661ASIA’S emerging economies are bouncing back much more strongly than any others. While America’s industrial production continued to slide in May, output in emerging Asia has regained its pre-crisis level (see chart 1). This is largely due to China; but although production in the region’s smaller economies is still well down on a year ago, it is rebounding in those countries too. Taiwan’s industrial output rose by an annualised 80% in the three months to May compared with the previous three months. JPMorgan estimates that emerging Asia’s GDP has grown by an annualised 7% in the second quarter.

Asia’s ability to decouple from America reflects the fact that the region’s downturn was caused only partly by the slump in American activity. In most Asian economies falling domestic demand was more important than the drop in net exports in explaining the collapse in GDP growth. The surge in food and energy prices in the first half of 2008 squeezed profits and spending power. Tighter monetary policy aimed at curbing inflation then further choked domestic demand.

CFN683The recent recovery in industrial production reflects the end of destocking by manufacturers as well as the large fiscal stimulus by most governments. But the boost from both of these factors will fade. Meanwhile, export markets in developed economies are likely to remain weak. So the recovery in Asian economies will stumble unless domestic spending, notably consumption, perks up.

Consumers’ appetite to spend varies hugely across the region. In China, India and Indonesia spending has increased by annual rates of more than 5% during the global downturn. China’s retail sales have soared by 15% over the past year. This overstates the true growth rate because it includes government purchases, but official household surveys suggest that real spending is growing at a still-impressive rate of 9%. In the year to May, sales of household electronics were up by 12%, clothing by 22% and cars by a stunning 47%.

Elsewhere in the region, …


Comments

2 responses to “Shopaholics wanted”

  1. Someone made an interesting point about the current “stimulus”: the apparent aim of the stimulus was to get us to go out and buy things. As they gave money to almost everybody, that’s a reasonable conclusion.
    But we have to ask where this Stuff is coming from. And the answer is obvious: Asia. Go into any local Stuff Store, and you’ll find “Made in China” on almost everything.
    I just checked for a local company, Harley-Davidson:
    “MILWAUKEE (April 16, 2009) – Harley-Davidson, Inc. (NYSE:HOG) reported decreased revenue, net income and diluted earnings per share for the first quarter of 2009 compared to the year-ago period. Worldwide retail sales of Harley-Davidson® motorcycles in the first quarter declined 12.0 percent and U.S. retail sales declined 9.7 percent from last year’s first quarter.”
    So much for the stimulus. President Bush tried the same thing, made the same mistake, but as a result, now I have two coffee-tins full of money buried in my back yard.
    We’re stimulating the economy, all right – it’s just not ours.
    I read somewhere else today that our saving rate is going up. That would explain where the stimulus money went, and also that we just might be thinking about the future.

  2. “… saving rate is going up …we just might be thinking about the future.”
    That is not a bad thing, especially for the long haul health of the economy.

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