This Week in Asia

Why a falling yuan raises economic jitters in Australia

When the yuan hit a six-month low against the US dollar earlier this summer, Australian businesses had more reason than most to sit up and take notice.

China buys almost one-third of Australia's exports, with a particular appetite for commodities such as iron ore and coal. Chinese visitors, mostly tourists and international students, spend more than A$8 billion (US$5.9 billion) in the country each year, almost five times as much as Americans. In Australia's red-hot property market, where the average cost of a house in Sydney exceeds A$1.1 million, Chinese are by far the top-spending foreign investors, last year splashing out more than A$15 billion.

All things being equal, the weaker the yuan, the less Chinese consumers have to spend on Australian goods and services.

In Australia's red-hot property market, where the average cost of a house in Sydney exceeds A$1.1 million, Chinese are by far the top-spending foreign investors. File photo

"The Chinese kind of deny this, but the yuan is pretty tightly managed these days and I doubt that the yuan would be depreciating in the way it has done in the last few weeks if they didn't want it to," Saul Eslake, an independent economist based in Tasmania, said.

Although China's GDP officially grew 6.9 per cent last year, beating Beijing's target, there is scepticism about the reliability of the government's figures.

"A lot of the other indicators - particularly for commodity-intensive sectors like real estate and fixed investment - do suggest a much more marked slowing than the GDP figures would imply," said Eslake.

"In my view, it's not surprising that there are now clear signs the economy is slowing, if you look beyond the GDP numbers, and it may well be, therefore, that the Chinese authorities are allowing the yuan to depreciate as one way to cushion or ameliorate that slowdown."

Justin Fabo, senior economist at Macquarie Securities, said there were clear signs of a slowdown in Chinese growth as authorities moved to rein in risky lending.

"The way we think about it usually is, if global growth is improving, Australia's growth is improving, and if global growth is weakening, our growth is weakening because we're a small, open economy," said Fabo, while stressing that it was too early to tell how significantly the Australian economy would be impacted.

The Fortescue Solomon iron ore mine located in the Sheila Valley, Western Australia. China buys almost one-third of Australia's exports, with a particular appetite for iron ore. Photo: Reuters

"A lot of that capital that was easily taken out of the country and put into foreign property markets is now stalled, can't get out," said David Llewellyn-Smith, the founder of financial analysis website MacroBusiness.

Many observers also view the yuan's slide as a response to US President Donald Trump's burgeoning trade war with Beijing. Having unveiled tariffs this year, Trump this week flagged his intention to impose even higher levies of 25 per cent on US$200 billion of Chinese goods. While imposing its own levies on American imports in response, Beijing has denied manipulating its currency to offset the effect of Trump's tariffs.

Many observers also view the yuan's slide as a response to US President Donald Trump's burgeoning trade war with Beijing. Photo: AP

For Australia, the fear is a vicious circle of escalation between the world's two largest economies.

"It could well make tariffs worse, in which case you are into a bit of a feedback loop, where the more tariffs you get, the more the yuan falls and the whole thing does get pretty ugly," said Llewellyn-Smith.

More than most, analysts agree, Australia has reason to fear a full-blown global trade war.

This article originally appeared on the South China Morning Post (SCMP).

Copyright (c) 2018. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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