February 28, 2007 The Coming Chinese Slowdown: Resolving the Paradox of Freedom and Growth by Tim Kane, Ph.D. WebMemo #1375
Wall Street's sell-off on February 27 was triggered by a severe drop in China's equity markets. On that day, all of the major U.S. indices experienced declines of between 3 and 4 percent, including the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500, and Nasdaq. Though the U.S. bond market rose, Treasury bonds have long been buoyed by massive investments from China's government. The 9 percentage point plummet of Chinese equities in one day, the worst performance in a decade, sends a sharp reminder and a warning. The reminder is that the economies of China and America are deeply integrated— the Sino-American engine is at the heart of globalization, after all. The warning is that the Sino side of the engine is strong but not stable.
One view of China doubts its economic strength and suspects that its macro statistics may be padded. Another view is that the data is real but that China offers an alternative form of economic development to the Washington Consensus—that is, the Anglo Model of corporate capitalism. Neither view holds. The data on imports from China are real enough: Measured in dollars, the United States imported $288 billion worth of goods in 2006, compared to less than $4 billion in 1985. As for those who wish to believe China has discovered a new development model, Adam Smith would argue there may be many paths up the mountain but they lead to the same place: free markets.
Indeed, during our tour of Asian, European, and American capitals promoting the 2007 Index of Economic Freedom, one question constantly arises: If economic freedom matters so much for growth, how is China doing so well? With a famously rapid rate of GDP growth, exceeding 10 percent annually for what seems like two decades, and a sub-par score of 54 percent in economic freedom, China's modern economy appears to be a powerful rebuke to the central claim that freedom and prosperity are linked, as is written on the cover of the book. The "China counterpoint" has led many to dismiss the role of freedom in economic development.
The simple answer is that searching for a direct link between the level of freedom and growth in income is futile. This is not a confession, but a suggestion that those who care about human progress drop the dogma and think about the economics. Growing economies are not accidentally free. They have to become free first, and it is the growth in one that leads to the growth in the other, not the mere level.
Obviously, poor countries have the most potential to grow, a potential that is usually unmet. Rich countries, in contrast, have far less potential to grow and can do so only by inventing new technologies and institutional arrangements. And it is no secret that rich countries tend to enjoy more freedoms of all kinds: political, economic, religious, and so on. High levels of freedom correlate with high levels (not growth rates) of GDP per capita. And so it is that 12 of the 20 freest economies in the Index are European, while the top five economies have deep European roots—they are all ex-British colonies, including the U.S. in fourth place.
To put it differently, a newborn baby will have a faster rate of weight gain than the child's mother. Even if the adult has perfect nutrition, and the newborn were subsisting on a poor diet, the adult might not change in weight at all, while the child would double his in a year. Countries are like this. Some have mature systems, and others varying levels of maturity. The most immature economies that enhance their nutrition will enhance their growth rates faster too, and comparisons to mature economies must be made very carefully.
Jeff Sachs famously used the China counterpoint in his book, The End of Poverty, which contains an amateurish chart showing the level of freedom on one axis and the change in GDP per capita on the other. Ironically, the China counterpoint is most popular in Europe, where there is great unease about weak growth and no small amount of denial over the causes. The people who find the counterpoint unpersuasive are, naturally, the Chinese.
Economic Freedom and Growth in China
To be sure, China's economic freedom measures just 54 percent in 2007. But 30 years ago in 1977, the measure would have been near zero. By quietly setting aside Maoist dogma in 1978, the introduction of property rights for small farmers by Deng Xiaopeng initiated a revolution in economic freedom. As Milton Friedman anticipated, this small infusion had dramatic and positive effects. Within a few years, the Communist Party was promoting the slogan "It is glorious to be rich." Looking back, China's economic freedom has grown by 1 or 2 percentage points every year for 30 years, and the economy grew along with it: a growth-growth relationship.
Clearly, the freedom-to-prosperity relationship is strong. What the Chinese government has done is raised China's growth potential by enhancing economic freedom. Nobel Laureate Ed Prescott and co-author Stephen Parente call this a reduction in the "Barriers to Riches," also the title of their book. The framework Parente and Prescott use is consistent with our approach: Economic prosperity is natural, but governments institute controls on the economy that constrain it...
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