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Since 2013, Beijing has promised a pivot to domestic consumption. In 2026, Stephen Roach's (Project Syndicate) verdict is unequivocal: the rebalancing has failed. This structural misalignment weighs on global markets as a whole.
Since 2013, Beijing has promised a "consumption pivot." In 2026, economist Stephen Roach (Project Syndicate) delivers a damning assessment: this rebalancing has not occurred. Household consumption remains stuck at ~37% of China's GDP (NBS, 2025), compared to 70% in the United States. Thirteen years of five-year plans have failed to move the needle. China remains an investment- and export-driven economy—and this imbalance is contaminating global markets.
China continues to operate in supply-side mode: industrial overcapacity (steel, solar panels, electric vehicles), exported deflation, and credit directed toward investment rather than consumption. Financial repression (weak social safety nets = massive precautionary savings) perpetuates the model. Result: China compresses global industrial margins and exports its deflation to Europe and emerging markets, fueling protectionist political pressures.
Central scenario: Limited China exposure to vertically integrated export champions (semiconductors, batteries), hedging on directly competing European sectors (steel, chemicals, EVs), premium on USD assets amid structurally pressured yuan.
Demographics worsen the constraint (working-age population declining since 2022). Risk of competitive devaluation if the current account surplus exceeds 3% of GDP. Contrarian angle: Any US-China normalization would quickly reduce the risk premium and could trigger a violent rebound in Chinese assets—current signals point the other way, but this warrants monitoring.
July 2026 Politburo meeting (potential stimulus); Chinese manufacturing PMI for July; US-China trade surplus (monthly Census Bureau data); CNY/USD—technical threshold at 7.35.
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Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.
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Roach nails it-China’s addiction to investment-led growth is a ticking time bomb. What happens when the debt-fueled engine stalls?
China’s consumption pivot flop is a wake-up call-global capital flows better brace for turbulence. Still, bet on Beijing’s adaptability over long-term doom.
Roach nails it-China’s consumption pivot was always more PR than policy. The real question: who’s left holding the bag when the capital flight accelerates?
Roach’s take ignores China’s shift in high-value sectors-consumption’s share rose, just not fast enough for Western pundits. Data beats dogma.
China: The Failure of Rebalancing and the Persistence of the Supply-Side Model