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Analysis-China urged to think big, go hard on reviving battered consumption
People ride an escalator at a shopping complex in Beijing · Reuters

By Kevin Yao

BEIJING (Reuters) - Coco Wen took advantage of China's consumer subsidies to buy herself a new iPhone for about two thirds of the original price. At the same time, she's cutting spending on other things.

"I usually celebrate my birthdays with a fancy meal, but this year I skipped that," said the 31-year-old, who works for a tourism agency that pays her less than before the pandemic as Chinese people cut back on overseas travel.

"Our family’s spending habits have changed to only buying what's necessary," said Wen, who now cooks at home instead of dining out.

China's most recent major push to boost household consumption - its trade-in scheme, a version of cash-for-clunkers but for electric vehicles, appliances and consumer electronics - comes with trade-offs.

While the programme makes households spend more short-term, they ultimately reduce expenses on unsubsidised goods and services. The scheme also cuts into future spending as consumers may not replace their cars and appliances for several years.

"It could be harmful from the perspective of a five-to-six-year cycle," said Xing Zhaopeng, ANZ's senior China strategist.

Those shortcomings are raising pressure on authorities to unveil consumer-focused policies with a longer-term impact when China's rubber-stamp parliament begins its annual meeting on March 5.

Such moves are increasingly important as Beijing fights a damaging trade war with Washington and needs Chinese consumers to step up and purchase the products peers in other markets are now buying less of, as tariffs rise.

China leaned heavily on exports to reach its roughly 5% economic growth target last year, but even before any tariff hikes economists had raised concerns that this strategy created excess industrial capacity and fanned deflationary pressures.

"China has a serious overcapacity problem," said Louis Kuijs, S&P Global's chief Asia economist. "Domestically this is weighing on prices and profits. Externally, it is amplifying a pushback against Chinese exports. Raising consumption would really help."

On that front, Kuijs was "keen to see any plans the government has on raising its role and spending on health, education and social security" that might emerge at the National People's Congress (NPC) meeting.

VIGOROUS PLEDGES

While little is known about what new policies Beijing will unveil, officials have so far pledged to "vigorously" boost consumption this year, including by raising incomes, pensions and medical subsidies.