



: William Pesek
So you think China’s 6% growth will power a global recovery. Think again. Economists, for example, can’t put a gloss on how ugly Japan’s data are getting. Exports and output are plunging, unemployment is at a 25-year high and those all-important summer bonuses are evaporating. The best we can say is that sentiment among large manufacturers was less gloomy in June than expected. Where is that smidgen of hope coming from? China, which rarely misses a chance to declare victory over the global recession. Officials in Beijing say stimulus spending and record lending are sparking a recovery in the third-biggest economy.
Export-led Japan would seem perfectly placed to benefit. That is, until you check the evidence. Shipments to Japan’s biggest trading partner fell 29.7% in May, more than April’s 25.9%. It suggests China’s growth isn’t helping the rest of Asia very much.
China acted quickly to shield its economy from the global crisis. Manufacturing in May expanded for a fourth month. Central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan says things may keep improving in the third and fourth quarters. It’s also worth noting that Japanese exports to China are falling less severely than elsewhere. Shipments to the US fell 45.4% in May. Exports to Europe too slid.
China isn’t turning out to be an engine of growth for Asia, as it works to encourage exports while curbing imports. The country objects to the “Buy American” provisions in US stimulus efforts, yet it is using similar tactics. Another reason may be that China’s revival is more spin than reality. Either way, talk that China would feed the “green shoots” dynamic that Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke introduced into Wall Street’s lexicon four months ago isn’t working out. Nor will the Asia-decoupling theory that’s being resurrected. Asia’s fortunes are still intricately tied to what happens in the $14 trillion US economy. The longer the US is on its back, the harder it will be for Asia to maintain modest growth. One reason for a resurgence of the decoupling argument debunked last year is actual growth. Even with the US, Europe and Japan mired in recession, economies in China, India, Indonesia, the Philippines and Australia are still expanding. That’s impressive given the state of credit markets.
Fast forward
Fast-forward one year, though. If the US economy is still weak in July 2010, Asia will have a hard time supporting growth from within. At the moment, stimulus...
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