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China: The Failure of Rebalancing – A Structural Risk for Global Capital Flows

Ongoing story : China: The Failure of Rebalancing and the Persistence of the Supply-Side Model· Part 1/4

MacroSubscribers only Jun 26, 2026 at 15:555Add to bookmarks

China: The Failure of Rebalancing – A Structural Risk for Global Capital Flows
Jimmy Woo · Unsplash

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.

Context

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.

Data

  • Household consumption: ~37% of Chinese GDP (NBS, 2025) vs official target of 50%+
  • Household savings rate: ~34% of disposable income (OECD, 2025)
  • Net exports' contribution to 2024 growth: +1.5 percentage points of GDP (World Bank)
  • GDP deflator: -0.7% in 2024—persistent deflationary pressure (NBS)
  • Current account surplus: ~2.5% of GDP (IMF, WEO April 2026)

Analysis

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.

Probability-weighted Scenarios

  • Prolonged status quo (50%): Exported deflation persists, tariff tensions intensify (US + EU). Capital flows: underweight Chinese equities, hedge exposed European exporters (steel, chemicals, EVs).
  • External corrective shock (30%): US/EU tariff escalation forces industrial contraction. Partial recession, yuan destabilization. Bias toward USD, gold, US sovereign bonds.
  • Forced pivot (20%): Residual real estate crisis compels Beijing to launch massive consumption stimulus. Rebound in Asian emerging markets, commodity volatility.

Portfolio Implications

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.

Risks & Blind Spots

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.

To Watch

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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Heinrich VogelÉconomiste macro & banques centrales (Francfort)
Il suit la Fed, la BCE et les grands équilibres macroéconomiques mondiaux.
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Comments (5)

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SheffieldSage 27 Jun 2026 · 12:01

China’s addiction to debt-fueled growth was always going to end in tears. But what do I know?

L. from Leeds 27 Jun 2026 · 10:08

Roach nails it-China’s addiction to investment-led growth is a ticking time bomb. What happens when the debt-fueled engine stalls?

1
J.P.R. 26 Jun 2026 · 14:10

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.

FinePrintFiona 26 Jun 2026 · 14:05

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?

MacroMarcus 26 Jun 2026 · 14:03

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.

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