China’s thrifty consumers are key to its economic growth – can Beijing convince them to spend more?
- As China’s economy slows, in addition to loosening monetary policy and investing in technology to counter the impact of its falling birth rate, the country must strengthen welfare provisions, such as health care, to bolster consumer confidence
It is no accident that China is evolving into an advanced consumer-driven economy, with consumer spending accounting for nearly two-thirds of economic growth. Beijing wants sustainable economic expansion based on more stable domestic growth with less vulnerability to volatile mood swings in the global economy. The damage to growth prospects from the US-China trade war has been a painful reminder that Beijing should capitalise more on its domestic strengths.
The challenge for Beijing is how to tap into this deep pool of domestic savings, harness the pent-up spending power and channel it into a stronger, long-lasting recovery. Annual inflation-adjusted retail spending growth picked up to 7.1 per cent in February from a cyclical low point of 5.6 per cent in October last year, but it is too soon to say whether this marks a turnaround in consumer optimism after eight years of slowdown. Consumers have a lot on their minds right now.
