Key Takeways
Historical Context of Overcapacity: China has faced industrial overcapacity since the 1990s due to its investment-driven growth model. Recent episodes occurred post-2008 financial crisis and again after COVID-19, highlighting ongoing supply-demand imbalances and excessive production in various sectors, notably clean technology.
Wider Scope of Current Overcapacity: Presently, the issue is broader, impacting diverse sectors such as consumption goods and construction materials. While industrial capacity utilization rates suggest a milder situation, continued fixed investment growth could exacerbate the excess capacity problem if domestic demand does not rise correspondingly.
- Challenges in Addressing Overcapacity: Government initiatives aim to regulate capacity through industrial upgrades, yet comprehensive adoption is limited due to potential economic drawbacks. Stimulating consumer demand becomes essential, but with confidence low, reliance on domestic markets may not alleviate chronic overcapacity, complicating export prospects amid rising trade barriers.
Production overcapacity is not a new phenomenon in China, but this time it concerns a greater number of products. This variety makes oversupply more difficult to control, and the shortfall in the domestic market will have to be made up by other means. Discover which ones in our study.
Overcapacity, not new to China
China has long accustomed to an investment-driven growth model, which is central to its stellar economic growth over the past three decades. But it also makes the economy susceptible to supply-demand imbalances, leading to recurring episodes of industrial overcapacity. These can be traced back to the 1990s, when accelerated market reforms led to a glut of labor-intensive manufactured goods. A more recent episode occurred in 2014-2016, when the massive investment-led stimulus that followed the global financial crisis triggered an oversupply of construction materials.
While this playbook is not new, the imbalances have become evident again since the COVID-19 outbreak, largely due to a production-driven stimulus aimed at reducing social interaction. But as the economy emerged from the pandemic, household consumption has failed to pick up enough to stomach the increases in production. And amid the international race of green transition, China’s production surplus in clean technology products also became a focal topic globally as its excess capacity could be enough to double the exports of these products.
Current overcapacity more widespread
At first glance, the extent of overcapacity appears to be milder than the last severe episode, gauged by industrial capacity utilization rates. But this problem could worsen if growth in fixed investment continues to outstrip that of production, accentuating the excess capacity, especially if domestic demand does not keep pace. Meanwhile, excess capacity risks are not confined to specific sectors but evident across consumption goods, construction materials as well as machinery and transportation equipment.
Revitalize domestic market to absorb excess capacity takes time
Government measures have been taken to regulate capacity expansion through industrial upgrading, while boosting demand to absorb it. For example, higher quality requirements have been imposed on the production of lithium-ion batteries, solar energy and cement clinker. But these measures are unlikely to be replicated across a broad range of sectors since doing so also hurts near-term economic growth.
A more sustainable solution is to stimulate demand, with recent fiscal support shifting more towards subsidizing goods and facility consumption rather than construction. But with consumer confidence near historic lows, the economy cannot just rely on domestic demand and endure chronic overcapacity. Because this will amplify deflationary pressures, affect corporate profits and hinder business expansion.
Era of easily accessing export markets seems fading
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