,,China's Economic Prospects 2006-2020

China's Economic Prospects 2006-2020


 

Publication Date: April 2007

Publisher: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Author(s): Jianwu He; Shantong Li; Sandra Polaski

Research Area: Economics

Type: Report

Coverage: China

Abstract:

A new report by the Carnegie Endowment and China's Development Research Center shows that the health of China's economy and trade over the next 15 years will have more impact on China's rural poor than any other segment of Chinese society. The report also finds that while WTO accession has generally benefited China's economy, it has further increased the already pronounced economic disparity between Chinese urban and rural households. Accession to the WTO has added only a net thirteen million jobs while an estimated 300 million jobs are needed to create full employment in China.

In China's Economic Prospects 2006-2020, Sandra Polaski, Li Shantong, and He Jianwu use general equilibrium models to probe three possible economic paths for China--one projecting a benign international and domestic environment, one a continuation of recent trends, and one higher risk scenario.

The authors argue that poor rural households would see fewer job opportunities in the cities and continued low wages if trade tensions rise. As more farmers stay on the land and incomes rise less, China would import fewer agricultural products from the rest of the world, disappointing farm exporters.

The authors point to challenges that Chinese policymakers must address if they are to optimize China's development to broadly benefit its population. They also suggest that some current approaches of China's trade partners could be counterproductive for their own export interests.

The authors recommend policies that raise incomes widely, particularly for rural households, to generate broad-based domestic demand and reduce the economy's reliance on trade. They suggest an emphasis on service sector development, particularly of education and health care services, to generate more labor-intensive jobs to absorb surplus labor from the agriculture sector.