The sign of China’s ‘rebound’ may be a housing bubble
You report (“China house price surge points to recovery”, April 17) on the significant improvement in the Chinese economy after a difficult start to the year.
However, what appears to be a healthy rise in home prices may in fact be a housing bubble that is being overlooked by the government. This is not an economic rebound. It’s a classic Minsky moment in the making.
China’s sluggish economic growth has prompted the government to focus on housing market growth to compensate for weaknesses in its exports industries. The housing market now accounts for about 25 per cent of the total economic output. Although China’s intentions were to spur growth, it has instead laid the seeds of its next crisis.
Minsky moment crises are known for happening when investors take on too much debt during an economic boom. The Chinese government wanted to encourage market demand by making credit more accessible, and by doing so it has gone back on its more prudent position that “houses are for living in, not for speculating on”. This looser credit environment is certainly expansionary and is underwriting the desired economic stability sought by the Chinese government, but as Minsky said, “stability breeds instability”.
The rising debt-to-income ratios, increased risk exposure by the banks and rampant speculative behaviour in real estate are fuelling this market bubble, and will ultimately bring about a credit crunch in a classic Minsky moment. I would argue that the Chinese economy is actually in a fragile state.
To prevent a housing crisis, China needs to instil a more prudent credit policy, and to ensure a steady rise in wages and incomes so that homebuyers can validate their debts. Failure to do so will add fuel to fire. The speculative housing bubble will ultimately burst and will send the housing market of the second-largest economy in the world crashing.
Francisco Becerril
Chicago, IL, US