Quake may speed up China's pace of investment
By Simon Rabinovitch and Eadie Chen - Analysis
BEIJING (Reuters) - Still grieving the deaths of tens of thousands, China has sketched the first blueprints for rebuilding after last week's earthquake.
The scale will be huge, pointing to a possible pick-up in the already rapid pace of investment. But ultimately, the impact on China's economy will be small and on the global economy, negligible.
Flush with ample, fast-growing tax revenues, China will have little difficulty turning on the cash spigots.
Tents are the crucial need now, but in the coming months China will break ground on houses for 5 million people left homeless -- about equivalent to the population of Singapore.
Plans for new offices, schools, factories and roads -- entire new cities, in fact -- are also being crafted.
"Initially, we'd been looking for investment to moderate over the course of next year, but I think it's clearly going to strengthen, potentially quite markedly," said Glenn Maguire, Asia-Pacific chief economist at Societe Generale in Hong Kong.
"Some of the rebalancing we've seen in growth away from investment towards consumption is likely to reverse," he said.
Concerned about disorderly capital spending, industrial overcapacity and worsening pollution, China has tried to cool investment, issuing a raft of edicts, such as tighter land-conversion rules, and clamping down on bank lending.
The government has scored some successes, dragging fixed-asset investment down to a 26 percent annual growth rate from nearly 50 percent four years ago, but investment still accounted for 42.1 percent of gross domestic product in 2007.
A spending surge in the quake-hit areas and vulnerable cities across China may dwarf the economic cost of the disaster, concentrated in a mountainous corner of southwestern Sichuan province.
"The impact on the full-year economy and industrial production should be very limited," said Xing Ziqiang, an economist with China International Capital Corp (CICC) in Beijing.
Direct economic losses in Sichuan will amount to about 67 billion yuan ($9.6 billion), or 0.27 percent of China's 2007 GDP, the government said this week.
KOBE COMPARISON
Such damage would be far less than that from the Kobe earthquake in 1995, estimated to have cost Japan as much as 2.5 percent of its GDP.
Comparison of the two disasters is somewhat misleading, Goldman Sachs economists Hong Liang and Yu Song said in a note to clients on Wednesday. Continued...





