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The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University of Finance and Economics (Beijing, China) b Development Research Center of the State Council of China
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The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation

in rural China

UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014

Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b

a Central University of Finance and Economics (Beijing, China)

b Development Research Center of the State Council of China

Page 2: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

2

Introduction

My cooperating policymaker: Ms. Li, Shantong Professor Li is a senior research fellow at Development

Research Center (DRC) of the State Council, P.R. China. She is the former director general of the Development Strategy and Regional Economy of the DRC.

Page 3: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

3

Motivation

Policy reform Exchange rate reforms launched by the Chinese authorities in July

2005. The Renminbi has been appreciating over 30% and the trend continues.

90

100

110

120

130

140

USD/RMB

CPI

Source: Authors’ calculations ,based on data from the International Financial Statistics, Bank for International Settlements and United States Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Page 4: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

4

Motivation (cont’d)

Poverty reduction in China China’s achievement in reducing poverty during the reform era has

been remarkable. China still having the world’s second-largest poor population in

absolute terms after India.

Page 5: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

5

Motivation (cont’d)

Public debate

The impact of the renminbi appreciation on the country’s trade flows, labour market and economic growth has been widely analyzed.

But, the effects of exchange rate movements on consumers and poverty in China has not yet been studied in the existing literature.

The few responses have come in the form of opinions rather than hard evidence.

Page 6: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Research questions

What does the recent appreciation of the renminbi mean for the poor in China?

Has the appreciation of the renminbi lowered expenditures and hence made Chinese households better off?

Has it favored the poor or rich households in China?

Page 7: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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How may the exchange rate movementsaffect the poor?

Channel 1: price transmission

Exchange rate movements directly affect the prices of imported intermediate and finished goods.

Exchange rate pass-through (ERPT): the percentage change in domestic price measures resulting from a one percent change in the nominal exchange rate.

Channel 2: exchange rate fluctuation could result in fluctuation in output, which has an impact on the incomes of the poor.

Page 8: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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How may the exchange rate movements affect the poor? (cont’d)

Channel 3: the real exchange rate effect

The real exchange rate influences the country’s external competitiveness and hence its growth rate, which can affect the poor in the long term through reduced employment opportunities and wages.

*R Pe E

P

Page 9: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

9

Methodology and Data

Estimate the impact of the RMB appreciation on consumer prices of

different goods (food, clothing, transportation and communication, medical care, education, housing, durable goods)

different regions (22 provinces in China) by controlling for index of “marketization” to capture the regional

heterogeneity in exchange rate pass-through, which is time-varying and could be better capture the heterogeneous responses to external shock.

Exchange rate movements Consumer prices Consumption

expenditure

① ②

Page 10: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Marketization Index for China’s Provinces

The Index measures the relative position in the progress towards market economy compared to other provinces.

The Index comprises 19 indicators of institutional arrangements and policies in 5 major areas with the market-oriented reform (Government and market; The ownership structure; Goods market development; factor market development; The legal framework).

Page 11: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Methodology and Data

Simulate the impact of price changes on household welfare through consumption.

Consumption structure of households in different regions are calculated using 2002 China Household Income Project Survey (Rural areas)

Non-parametric regressions are used to describe how changes in the prices of final consumption goods affect the different types of households following Deaton (1989).

Exchange rate movements Consumer prices Consumption

expenditure

① ②

Page 12: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Findings (I)

Estimations of the exchange rate pass-through to consumer prices

Incomplete and varies substantially across products and regions.

Consumer prices of food and housing expenditure are relatively more response to exchange rate changes.

Consumer prices seem to be more responsive to exchange rate changes in provinces with a high marketization index (coastal regions).

-0.60

-0.50

-0.40

-0.30

-0.20

-0.10

0.00

0.10

0.20

Aver

age

ERPT

Page 13: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Findings (II): pro-rich bias

The average welfare gain from a 10% appreciation amounts to 1.4% of household expenditure.

Rich households derive larger benefits from the RMB appreciation than poor households (pro-rich bias).

Page 14: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Why the poor gain less?

Poor households spend less on food and housing, which become cheaper as a result of the appreciation.

But, they usually spend more on medical care, the price of which has not decreased following the appreciation.

Page 15: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Findings (III)

No big difference in welfare gains between poor and rich households in the coastal provinces.

In the inland provinces, the welfare gains of the richest households are about twice that of the poorest households.

Page 16: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Findings (IV)

The effects of appreciation are greater in coastal areas than in inland provinces, conditional on per capita household income.

Page 17: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Conclusion

The ERPT is incomplete and heterogeneous across the goods and provinces.

The ERPT is higher for consumer prices of food and housing and in provinces with more developed market economy.

All the residents gain from the RMB appreciation in terms of the consumption expenditure but the poor benefit less.

The residents living in the coastal region with highly-developed market economy gain more.

Page 18: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Caveats

Only examined the impact of the exchange rate changes on household welfare that occurs through the consumption channel rather than income channel.

Only estimate the direct effect of price changes induced by the appreciation, disregarding the substitution effects due to the relatively aggregate consumption data.

Page 19: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Policy recommendations

Anti-poverty policies should take into account regional heterogeneity - such as consumption patterns of residents and the development level of the market economy.

The government should pay more attention to the fundamental factors such as excessive issuance of currency, increasing market demand and supply costs that drive domestic inflation, in addition to keeping a more flexible exchange rate regime.

Page 20: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

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Policy recommendations

Social safety nets should be extended to cover more rural residents. More health care and education subsidies should be given to them. Policies favorable to growth in agriculture and lifting of restrictions on migration will relive the pressure on the social safety net.

Given the limited welfare gains through the consumption channel, the government should pay attention to labour market effects that are also likely to substantially affect the poor.

Page 21: The consumption effect of the renminbi appreciation in rural China UNCTAD-Vi Trade and Poverty Analysis 2014 Dahai Fu a and Shantong Li b a Central University.

21 Questions and Comments?