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FRBSF ECONOMIC LeTTer
2012-31

October 15, 2012

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Is China Due for a Slowdown?
Israel Malkin and Mark M. Spiegel
Many analysts have predicted that a Chinese economic slowdown is inevitable because the country is approaching the per
capita income at which growth in other countries began to decelerate. However, China may escape such a slowdown
because of its uneven development. An analysis based on episodes of rapid expansion in four other Asian countries
suggests that growth in China’s more developed provinces may slow to 5.5% by the close of the decade. But growth in
the country’s less-developed provinces is expected to run at a robust 7.5% pace.

After a prolonged period of extremely rapid economic growth, is China slowing down? China’s gross
domestic product is expected to decelerate to 8% growth this year from 9.2% in 2011, according to the
International Monetary Fund (see International Monetary Fund 2012). China’s slowdown is often
attributed to transitory events beyond its control, such as the crisis in Europe and the sluggishness of
the U.S. recovery. Moreover, despite the downshift, growth is broadly in line with the Chinese
government’s five-year plan and remains at a pace many countries would welcome.
Nonetheless, some analysts warn that the slowdown may be permanent. Historically, countries don’t
seem to be able to grow at such rapid rates forever. Fast-growing countries often fall into what is
commonly referred to as the “middle-income trap,” in which rising wages erode global competitiveness,
leading to a marked slowdown. Eichengreen, Park, and Shin (2011) demonstrate that growth rates of
fast-expanding countries decline on average around 2% per year when per capita income reaches about
$17,000. China will soon approach that level. Moreover, studies of sustained rapid growth episodes
suggest that, on average, they do not exceed ten years (see Aizenman and Spiegel 2010). China has
grown rapidly for over 30 years. Given China’s prominence in the global economy, a prolonged
slowdown could weigh on Western economies and hamper a global recovery already under pressure
from the euro-area downturn and weak U.S. expansion.
This Economic Letter examines whether a substantial Chinese slowdown is imminent. We pay special
attention to the fact that per capita income in China is extremely unequal. China ranks 27th out of 136
countries in income inequality (Central Intelligence Agency 2012). Moreover, income distribution is
highly skewed geographically. Wealthier provinces are mainly located on the eastern coast, while poorer
provinces are concentrated in the largely rural interior. Some provinces, most notably Beijing and

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Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco | Research, Economic Research, China, Chinese Economy, Economic Growth |

Shanghai, are close to, or even beyond, the $17,000 per capita income level associated with the middleincome trap. But many Chinese provinces have far to go before reaching this level (see Eichengreen et
al. 2011). If growth in these provinces outpaces that in the wealthier regions, China’s economy could
continue to grow at a robust pace for a long time.
Recent evidence suggests that the poorer
Chinese provinces are catching up with
their richer counterparts, at least on
average. This phenomenon, called
convergence, has been observed widely in
other countries, including the United
States, where poorer states have tended
to grow income faster than richer states
(see Barro and Sala-i-Martin 1992).

Figure 1
Convergence among Chinese provinces

Figure 1 displays average growth rates for
Chinese provinces since 2000. There is a
negative relationship between a province’s
income in 2000 and its subsequent
growth. China’s two wealthiest provinces,
Beijing and Shanghai, have had the lowest
per capita growth since 2000.
We divide China’s provinces into higher
Source: CEIC database.
and lower-income groups, examining their
prospects for continued growth based on
current income levels. Provinces with per
capita income below $10,000 are identified in blue as emerging. Provinces above that level are identified
in red as developed. We then perform a statistical exercise, using data from a group of other Asian
economies that have had rapid growth experiences to predict expansion rates for these two groups of
Chinese provinces.
Our results indicate that growth of the wealthier portion of China is likely to slow, but substantial room
remains for continued growth in China’s interior. For example, among the advanced Chinese provinces,
average growth is predicted to slow to 7% in the five years beginning in 2016. However, growth among
China’s emerging provinces is not expected to fall to that rate until sometime during the five years
beginning in 2024. Thus, the emerging Chinese provinces are predicted to enjoy more than an additional
decade of high growth before succumbing to the middle-income trap.
Middle-income traps in other Asian countries
What evidence exists for middle-income traps in a group of Asian economies that, like China,
experienced episodes of rapid growth? We pool data for Hong Kong, Japan, Korea, and Taiwan from
1950 to 2009. Data are measured in five-year intervals to concentrate on long-term growth patterns
and avoid the volatility that stems from short-term business cycle effects. GDP per capita is measured in
international 2005 dollars using the Heston, Summers, and Aten (2012) Penn World Table 7.1.
Figure 2 displays a scatterplot of the
relationship between per capita income
and average growth over the following five
years for the four economies. It shows
that growth of these economies slowed
markedly after they reached middle-

Figure 2
GDP growth vs. income for four Asian economies

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Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco | Research, Economic Research, China, Chinese Economy, Economic Growth |

income status.
Growth rates for these economies are
highest just below the $10,000 per-capitaincome level and then slow down rapidly as
income increases. The blue curve indicates
that these economies grew on average at
a 4.8% rate when per capita income
reached $17,000, down from a high of
7.2% at the $7,800 level.
Interestingly, the middle-income trap
appears to arise in Asia at lower income
Source: Penn World Tables. Annual data from Hong Kong,
levels than has been found for broader
Japan, Korea, and Taiwan.
groups of emerging-market economies. It
may be that large Asian countries with
relatively low prevailing wages cause the dynamic of the middle-income trap to shift. In Asia, countries
may begin to become uncompetitive for certain labor-intensive activities at lower income levels than in
other parts of the world.
Implications for Chinese growth
What does the middle-income slowdown experienced by the four Asian economies imply for China? Using
the results from our pooled sample of four Asian economies, we create a model to predict five-yearinterval growth rates for our emerging and developed Chinese provinces. Technically, we use what is
known as an error-correction model in which the movement of the variables in any period is related to
the previous period’s departure from the long-term trend. In this case, current income growth in the
model depends on the gap between income growth during the past five-year period and the growth
predicted by the curve in Figure 2. We then estimate the rate at which the gap narrows between
observed growth and the model’s forecast growth rate. Our model implies that growth is self-correcting,
in that the gap between the observed growth rate and the statistically predicted rate for the four Asian
economies decreases at a steady pace. We apply our model to China to predict growth rates for the
emerging and advanced Chinese regions. (For details on the specifications and methodology used,
please see /economic-research/files/el2012-31-technical-appendix.pdf).
Figure 3 shows observed and forecast
growth for the two Chinese regions since
1990. Our statistical exercise forecasts a
slowdown in both regions, but the pace is
quite different. In the developed
provinces, the slowdown is relatively
rapid, though not abrupt. Expected growth
in these provinces falls to 7% in the fiveyear interval beginning in 2016.

Figure 3
Growth forecasts: Advanced vs. emerging economies

However, the expected pace of slowdown
in the emerging provinces is even less.
Expected growth in these provinces
doesn’t fall to 7% until sometime during
the five-year interval beginning in 2024.
The reason for this discrepancy is that the

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Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco | Research, Economic Research, China, Chinese Economy, Economic Growth |

emerging provinces have a long way to go
before they reach income levels
associated with the middle-income trap.

Sources: CEIC database, Penn World Tables.

This implies that, in the near future, rapid
growth in China will be concentrated
primarily in the Chinese interior rather than in the more advanced areas near the coast. For example, by
2020, growth in the developed provinces is expected to slow to a still-healthy, but unexceptional 5.5%.
But growth in the emerging provinces is expected to remain a robust 7.5%. Thus, China’s overall growth
slowdown may not be severe. The advanced provinces may indeed reach income levels associated with
the middle-income trap. But rapid expansion in the emerging provinces will at least partly offset the
overall effect on China’s growth.
Caveats
Our analysis is based on a simple statistical model. Actual growth may not mirror the model’s forecasts
for several reasons. Much recent Chinese growth has been in the manufacturing, export-oriented
industries located primarily in the developed coastal provinces. While growth in the Chinese interior is
currently consistent with convergence, that pattern is the historical exception. Except for a few years in
the late 1990s, growth in the advanced provinces has consistently exceeded that in the emerging
provinces. The inland regions face a number of challenges, including inferior infrastructure and
remoteness from industrial networks. Such obstacles could keep them from converging with the more
affluent provinces at rates comparable to those observed elsewhere in Asia.
On the other hand, the Chinese government is now pursuing policies explicitly designed to address
income inequality (see Lin 2012). These policies promote the convergence of emerging provinces at a
more rapid rate than that predicted by our statistical model. The disadvantages and advantages of the
emerging provinces tend to offset each other and it is hard to know which will be dominant. Moreover,
dividing China into emerging and advanced regions is to some extent artificial. In reality, they are part
of the same country and affect each other in important ways that bear on their respective growth rates.
Capital from the wealthier provinces might flow to the emerging provinces, which may seem to have
more profitable investment opportunities, spurring growth.
Conclusion
While average income in China appears to be headed towards levels that have been associated with
growth slowdowns in other countries, high income inequality between wealthier coastal provinces and
the less-developed interior suggest that deceleration may not be severe. China’s relatively undeveloped
areas may be able to grow at high rates for some time before reaching income levels associated with
slowdown. This could delay a middle-income trap growth slowdown for the nation as a whole. Emerging
Chinese provinces are likely to maintain their high growth rates for some time after their wealthier

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Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco | Research, Economic Research, China, Chinese Economy, Economic Growth |

counterparts have slowed. Still, many other developments could influence the relative pace of growth in
different regions of China, including government expenditure on infrastructure in the outlying regions,
the pursuit of policies designed to reduce income inequality, and the impact of continued labor migration
from emerging provinces. Substantial uncertainty remains about the relative pace of growth in the
emerging and advanced Chinese provinces.
Israel Malkin is a research associate in the Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank
of San Francisco.
Mark M. Spiegel is a vice president in the Economic Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of
San Francisco.
References
Aizenman, Joshua, and Mark M. Spiegel. 2010. “Takeoffs.” Review of Development Economics 14(2), pp.
177–196.
Barro, Robert J., and Xavier Sala-i-Martin. 1992. “Convergence.” Journal of Political Economy 100(2), pp.
223–251.
Central Intelligence Agency. 2012. “Gini Index.”

The World Factbook.

Eichengreen, Barry, Donghyun Park, and Kwanho Shin. 2011. “When Fast Growing Economies Slow
Down: International Evidence and Implications for China.”
NBER Working Paper 16919.
Heston, Alan, Robert Summers, and Bettina Aten. 2012. “Penn World Table Version 7.1.”
Center for
International Comparisons of Production, Income and Prices at the University of Pennsylvania, July.
Lin, Justin Yifu. 2012. “China and the Global Economy.” In Asia’s Role in the Post-Crisis Global Economy,
eds. Reuven Glick and Mark M. Spiegel, 2011 Asia Economic Policy Conference Proceedings. San
Francisco: Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, pp. 213–229.
International Monetary Fund. 2012. “World Economic Outlook Update.”
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