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Monday, 25 January 2021

 China Adopts A New Monetary Policy In 2021 


By Hema Senanayake –

Hema Senanayake

In adopting this new policy China takes an unnecessary macroeconomic risk hoping to contain a persistent risk of growing systemic debt. This is a policy never adopted in the US, Europe and other OECD countries. In fact, as far as I know there is no country that has adopted this policy at least for a short period of time in history. However, this idea or policy prescription has not been formulated by Chinese scholars but by American scholars. Most notably American economist Milton Friedman developed this idea. Subsequently, students of American economist Irving Fisher, promote their monetary reform plan known as Chicago Plan by incorporating Friedman’s idea. None of these ideas have been tested in any developed country but now China is going to do it in 2021 and beyond. What is this new policy?

On January 08th, 2021, Reuter reports that the governor Yi Gang said that the central bank ensures the growth of broad money supply and total social financing in accordance with the nominal economic growth. In other words, the growth of money supply is linked to the GDP growth. Why do they do this?

According to the governor the central bank adopts this policy because, in 2021 monetary policy should prioritize stability to maintain … sustainability.” Does this mean that if China continues with the previous policy, would the economy be not stable? Perhaps, yes. Will the new policy ensure stability? Most probably not. 

The policy to be adopted by Chinese central bank did not come out of thin air. Even though China achieved double digit economic growth in previous decades it began to slow down and began to show some vulnerabilities in recent years. Mainly its total debt to GDP ratio surpassed the comparable figure of the U.S. Before the pandemic, in 2019, China’s total debt to GDP was at 257.6% while the U.S. posted the same ratio as 253.9%. However, the difference is, when the U.S. posted higher public debt to GDP ratio, China posted lower public data to GDP. At a glance this might appear as a strength of China. It is not so because, this means China’s non-financial private sector that is businesses plus households, is highly vulnerable than the non-financial sector of the US. Again, this mean that a debt crisis in private sector could emerge at any time. If this happens, sooner private debt crisis would become a public debt problem or crisis, having to bail out entrepreneurial sector. All these mean that in China there is a significant debt bubble. So, the solution devised by Chinese central bank is to adopt Milton Friedman’s monetary rule in which he suggests that, if monetary growth takes place in par with GDP growth there won’t be any debt bubble or inflation. He used the equation of exchange to explain it.  

Friedman and his fellow economists of the Chicago school of economic thought (monetarists), argued that in regard to the U.S., crises could be prevented by introducing a monetary rule (for example, 3% growth of money supply when GDP increases by 3%) for the monetary policy. They have come to this conclusion basically as follows. In economics there is a well-known equation call the equation of exchange which is MV = PQ. In this equation; M = money supply, V = velocity or the number of times money changes hand in a given period, Q = output and P = average price level.

Then Friedman pointed out that the equation of exchange can be expressed by rates of change of all variables as follows:

%M. %V = %P. % Q.

In the above equation, usually V is almost a constant, hence %V = 0. If we assume there is no change in output, then %Q = 0. So, we remove both variables from the equation. Then, %M = %P; this means that any increase of money supply must increase prices or in other words the inflation. Again, if Q, i.e. output, increases, in order for the prices to be stable there should be an equal amount in the rate of the growth in money stock. This concludes that it is possible to have a monetary rule in the rate of the growth of money stock comparable to the growth in the output while having stable price levels. In this arrangement, major swings in the business fluctuations are not possible. This is why monetarists see major business fluctuations, severe economic contractions, depressions relate to the large swings in the monetary growth, and the solution is to have a monetary rule as it could prevent severe changes in the stock of money.

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