Leaders | Xi’s broken model

Why China’s economy won’t be fixed

An increasingly autocratic government is making bad decisions

China’s leader, Xi Jinping, rides a dragon that transforms into a snail
Image: Ellie Foreman-Peck

WHATEVER HAS gone wrong? After China rejoined the world economy in 1978, it became the most spectacular growth story in history. Farm reform, industrialisation and rising incomes lifted nearly 800m people out of extreme poverty. Having produced just a tenth as much as America in 1980, China’s economy is now about three-quarters the size. Yet instead of roaring back after the government abandoned its “zero-covid” policy at the end of 2022, it is lurching from one ditch to the next.

The economy grew at an annualised rate of just 3.2% in the second quarter, a disappointment that looks even worse given that, by one prominent estimate, America’s may be growing at almost 6%. House prices have fallen and property developers, who tend to sell houses before they are built, have hit the wall, scaring off buyers. Consumer spending, business investment and exports have all fallen short. And whereas much of the world battles inflation that is too high, China is suffering from the opposite problem: consumer prices fell in the year to July. Some analysts warn that China may enter a deflationary trap like Japan’s in the 1990s .

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline "Xi’s failing model"

Xi’s failing model: Why he won’t fix China’s economy

From the August 26th 2023 edition

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