• McManus: China's economy is slowing, its population aging. That could m

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    from https://www.postbulletin.com/opinion/columns/doyle-mcmanus-chinas-economy-is-slowing-its-population-aging-that-could-make-it-dangerous

    Doyle McManus: China's economy is slowing, its population aging. That
    could make it dangerous
    But even an aging China with a slow-growing economy will be a powerful commercial, technological and military competitor.

    OPED-MCMANUS-COLUMN-GET
    Chinese President Xi Jinping at a ceremony to honor contributions to the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics at the Great Hall of the
    People on April 8, 2022, in Beijing.Kevin Frayer/Getty Images/TNS
    Opinion by Doyle McManus
    September 14, 2022 10:00 AM

    The Trust Project We are part of The Trust Project.
    China's economy is in trouble. The juggernaut that once looked bound for
    global domination is slowing down — and not only in the short run.

    The Chinese economy's projected growth this year has slowed to about 3%, missing the government's target of 5.5% by an embarrassingly wide margin.

    After decades of galloping expansion, that would be the second-worst performance in more than 40 years. Only 2020, with its COVID-induced
    recession, was worse.

    Unemployment among young workers has ballooned to 20%. Fuel prices are
    rising thanks to Russia's war in Ukraine. The overbuilt housing industry
    is teetering. And President Xi Jinping's draconian "COVID Zero"
    lockdowns have created havoc, most recently in technology-heavy Chengdu (population 21 million).

    Remember when Americans fretted about China overtaking the United States
    to claim the title of world's largest economy? That date has been
    postponed to 2033 or later, and a few economists suggest it might not
    happen at all.

    Some of those problems may be short term, driven by a slowing global
    economy and Xi's refusal to import foreign COVID-19 vaccines.

    But China also faces long-term challenges that won't go away, beginning
    with an onrushing demographic decline.

    The United Nations projects that China's population will shrink roughly
    40% by the end of the century, from 1.4 billion to a mere 800 million or
    so. Some demographers say the decline will be steeper; either way, India
    will soon take over as No. 1.

    The population decline stems from a low birthrate, which also means
    China's population is aging and its workforce shrinking. By 2050, more
    than a quarter of the population will be older than 65, Australia's Lowy Institute projects. Lowy expects China's growth rate to slow to an
    average of less than 3% over the next three decades as a result.

    China-watchers agree on those doleful forecasts. They disagree, though,
    on what that means for the country's future and for U.S. policy. How
    does a rising superpower react when the foundations of its strength
    appear to be eroding?

    Two foreign policy scholars, Hal Brands of Johns Hopkins and Michael
    Beckley of Tufts, have offered a frightening thesis: China's leaders
    know their power is about to diminish, and that will make them more
    likely to take risks in the short run — to invade Taiwan, for example.

    China "is losing confidence that time is on its side," they write in a
    recent book, "Danger Zone: The Coming Conflict With China."

    "China will have strong incentives to use force against its neighbors …
    even at risk of war with the United States," they warn. The "moment of
    maximum danger," they suggest, is this decade: the 2020s.

    A chorus of other China scholars have disagreed.

    First, they note, there's no evidence that Xi or other leaders believe
    their power is declining; they continue to predict the rise of China and
    the decline of the West.

    Even if China's economy slows down, it will be growing — still the second-largest in the world.

    "Countries can muddle along with a great deal of poor economic
    performance and still be a major force in international politics," noted
    Aaron L. Friedberg of Princeton, author of "Getting China Wrong."

    Besides, Xi and other Chinese leaders have a strategy for solving their economic challenge, he argued. "They see advances in technology as the
    key to solving all their problems," he told me. "That's how they plan to achieve higher productivity and reasonably high economic growth."

    "We have to do more … to slow down China's technological development,"
    he said, beginning with tighter controls on the export to Beijing of
    U.S. and other Western technology.

    A rosier scenario, Friedberg and others noted, is that a slowing economy
    could induce China's leaders to devote less spending to military
    strength and more to improving the lives of the Chinese people.

    "We should not assume that a weaker China would be aggressive," Bonnie
    S. Glaser of the German Marshall Fund argued. "China could turn inward.
    Maybe China isn't as intent on unification with Taiwan as it is on
    internal stability."

    So the 21st century may not be Chinese after all. China's rise to global
    power is neither inevitable nor foreordained.

    But even an aging China with a slow-growing economy will be a powerful commercial, technological and military competitor. At least until the
    end of Xi's third term in 2027, its leaders will still be ambitious,
    still bent on absorbing Taiwan, still intent on supplanting the United
    States as the dominant power in Asia.

    China's challenge is changing its shape, but it isn't going away.

    Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times . Readers may
    send him email at doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com .

    ©2022 Los Angeles Times
    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


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