Figure 3 Official and predicted Chinese GDP growth, 2004-2016

Looking back at the prediction for the end of 2015, we can reject the dire growth-collapse scenarios that were suggested by some of the Wall Street indices at the time, with it being very unlikely that the true growth rate of China was much below 6%. On the contrary, while we generally can’t reject that the official growth estimates are correct, we also can’t reject that they have understated Chinese growth since 2012, with the true level being closer to the average seen in the 2005-12 period. Our results are consistent with work by Rosen and Bao (2015), who argue that Chinese statistical services have chronically underestimated the size of the service sector. Rosen and Bao’s hypothesis is consistent with our finding that rail freight growth should receive less weight than the other indicators in the Li Keqiang index. Hence, as the Chinese economy becomes increasingly service-oriented, the (conventional) Li Keqiang index will likely send increasingly faulty signals about the state of China’s economy. In fact, our estimate for Chinese growth shows an appreciable acceleration in 2016, even as the official growth rate remained virtually unchanged.
It is important to understand the limitations of our analysis. While we present evidence that China’s growth was not as weak as claimed by some analysts in 2015 and is not experiencing a sharp slowdown right now, we have no way of saying whether the current pace of growth will be sustainable far into the future. The fact that bank loan growth appears to have been such a durable predictor of China’s overall economic growth raises some cause for concern (Dawson et al. 2017). Should lending decline for some reason – if, for example, the assumptions underlying existing lending are found to be unwarranted – then the Chinese economy could experience considerable turmoil. Rather than dismissing such risks, our research simply indicates that, at present, there are few immediate indications that Chinese growth is being systematically overestimated.
Editors’ note: This column first appeared in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Liberty Street Economics blog under the title ‘Is Chinese Growth Overstated?’ and is reprinted here with the Bank’s permission. The views expressed in this column are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the position of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York or the Federal Reserve System.
ReferencesClark, H, M Pinkovskiy and X Sala-i-Martin (2017), “China’s GDP Growth May Be Understated”, NBER Working Paper No. 23323.
Dawson, J, A Etra and A Rosenblum (2017), “China’s Continuing Credit Boom," Federal Reserve Bank of New York Liberty Street Economics, 27 February.http://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2017/02/chinas-continuing-c....
Ghosh, T, R L Powell, C D Elvidge, K E Baugh, P C Sutton and S Anderson (2010), “Shedding Light on the Global Distribution of Economic Activity”, The Open Geography Journal 3: 148–161.
Henderson, J V, A Storeygard and D N Weil, (2012), “Measuring Economic Growth from Outer Space”,American Economic Review 102: 994–1028.
Kawa, L (2015), “Six Ways to Gauge How Fast China’s Economy is Actually Growing”, Bloomberg News, 2 November 2. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-11-02/six-ways-to-gauge-how-...
Pinkovskiy, M and X Sala-i-Martin (2016), “Lights, Camera, Income! Illuminating the National Accounts-Household Surveys Debate”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 131: 579–631.
Rosen, D H and B Bao (2015), Broken Abacus? A More Accurate Gauge of China’s Economy. CSIS Report.
Rabinovitch, S (2010), “China’s GDP is ‘man-made,’ unreliable: top leader”, Reuters, 6 December.http://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-economy-wikileaks-idUSTRE6B527D2....