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China: stylized facts. PRESENTATION By Richard Herd Head Asian non-members Unit OECD Economics Department March 2006 OECD Development Centre Conference “China, India and Africa”. Growth has been very rapid. GDP growth at constant prices. Three factors have boosted growth:.
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China: stylized facts PRESENTATION By Richard Herd Head Asian non-members Unit OECD Economics Department March 2006 OECD Development Centre Conference “China, India and Africa”
Growth has been very rapid GDP growth at constant prices
Three factors have boosted growth: • Reform of the economic environment • Capital formation • Structural change
Prices are now market determined Share of price regulated transactions for industrial products
The economy has opened to foreign trade Average of exports and imports as % of GDP
Chinese imports a growing source of demand % of region’s GDP China
The number of state firms has fallen rapidly Share of Industrial sector Firms
The private sector output skyrockets …. Constant prices gross output
…… and is more productive … Excess productivity of firm types relative to direct state ownership
….. dominating exports … Note: These industries represent 75% of export value in 2003. Source: NBS industrial microdata
… and is now bigger than public sector Private sector value added as per cent of sector GDP
Rapid growth of capital • Fixed capital formation has accounted for half of growth • Human capital expanding rapidly
The capital stock has grown fast Annual Per cent change in estimated capital stock
Financed by high private sector saving Per Cent of GDP
Fiscal policy has been prudent Budget balance % of GDP Per cent of GDP
With little recourse to public debt Budget balance as Per Cent of GDP
Factors behind the growth in real income Share of growth attributable to each factor
Educational output has surged • Primary education almost complete • Junior high very good • University intake tripled
And is likely to continue growing Proportion of age group receiving given education level Source: Ministry of Education
Third factor: structural change • Move from agriculture • Source of productivity growth
Significant growth from sectoral change Productivity growth from structural change, five year average Per Cent per year % per year
Important micro-economic structural reforms needed • Financial markets • Basic economic laws need improvement • Labour markets need to be freer
Better basic laws for the private sector needed • A new company law is needed • A new bankruptcy law • A better anti-monopoly law also required • Laws to implement Constitutional Amendments
Enforcement of commercial laws needs improving • Difficult to obtain and enforce IPR judgements • Evidence of local prejudice in judgements • Creates barriers to innovation and expansion • Move to more central funding of judiciary • Separate courts for commercial law
Reducing regional inequalities • Urbanisation is a positive factor for development • Migration has been restricted • Boosts spatial income inequality • Complex group of policies needs changing
Contact details • richard.herd@oecd.org • http://puck.sourceoecd.org • www.oecd.org