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Balanced Clean Development in China Oxford Institute for Energy Studies Renfeng Zhao Oxford Institute for Energy Studies/Kreab Courtesy of workshop participants at Balanced Clean Development in China Workshop in Beijing, November 2008 The key features of Chinese Model Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • High investment rate supported by high savings and FDI inflows • Trade preferential policies • Domination of state-owned commercial banks in financial intermediation • Capital control Gross capital formation, % of GDP Oxford Institute for Energy Studies Source: WDI online, 2008. Household consumption, % of GDP 90 80 70 60 50 30 20 10 China Middle income countries Source: WDI online, 2008. High income countries Low income countries 2006 2004 2002 2000 1998 1996 1994 1992 1990 1988 1986 1984 1982 1980 1978 1976 1974 1972 0 1970 Oxford Institute for Energy Studies 40 The strength and weakness of Chinese Model Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • Strength – High GDP growth – Mitigate unemployment pressure – Not vulnerable to external shock • Weakness – Double misallocation of resources • A developing country exporting capital • Current account surplus Vs. Poor investment income – Excess liquidity (Inflation pressure + Asset bubble) • Twin surpluses (Accumulation of reserve) • Exchange rate inflexibility (Incomplete sterilization) Misallocation of resources Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • A typical developing country should run current account deficit and capital account surplus. • To fully utilize the FDI inflows, a developing country should use the capital inflows to purchase foreign machines, technologies and commodities, i.e., to translate the capital inflows into current account deficit. • However, twin surpluses reflect that China has fully utilized neither its domestic resource nor capital inflows. • A 1.9 billion USD foreign exchange reserve represent a huge subsidy to developed countries Why China should be worried Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • China’s growth relies on the high investment rate supported by high saving rate; • China is aging. Demographic dividend will disappear in 15 years. • China will need positive investment income to supplement the declining saving, otherwise China will not be able to maintain a decent investment ratio. How to rebalance Chinese economy Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • The traditional Chinese model is unsustainable. • To rebalance Chinese economy, a comprehensive policy mix should be adopted. • Financial crisis is both an opportunity and a challenge for the structural adjustment of Chinese economy. • Address specially – Deterioration of environment – Exhaustion of energy – Widening gap between the rich and poor, coastal and inland regions. Macroeconomic policy, energy security and the environment Oxford Institute for Energy Studies Trade-offs and challenges in the energy sector Energy security and the supply of primary energy Demand side and efficiency Trade-offs and challenges Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • Development – need to maintain growth momentum • Energy security – how to manage increasing import dependence and diversify away from coal • Prices and social impacts – is cleaner energy affordable? • Rebalancing – implications for energy security and the environment Rebalancing could help Oxford Institute for Energy Studies As the economy matures • Slow down of incremental energy demand with shift to services • Demand shifts to lower carbon fuels • Fuel supply structure changes • Policy intervention is more affordable But there could still be problems Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • Development of inland regions may promote transport demand and oil use • Services and higher domestic living standards lead to increased share of electricity • Construction has been major energy demand driver; inland development requires more construction • Difficulties with fuel diversification Managing the change Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • Economic rebalancing – can be used to shift to a new growth path • Global challenge creates global opportunities • “Pollute now, clean up later” could be very expensive • Many policies can help meet social and economic objectives – eg energy efficiency. Pricing could also be used proactively. Policies that promote rebalanced development Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • Energy efficiency • Low carbon electricity (clean coal; renewables; nuclear) • Transport – efficient vehicles and effective public transport • Use of CDM • Other forms of joint responsibility • Technology issues Climate Change communications Oxford Institute for Energy Studies • Climate change is an environmental issue as well as a development issue • Behaviour change is very important • Tackling myths and confusion about climate change is a long journey • Climate Change Journalists Club http://www.climatereporting.cn/English.aspx