BTCC / BTCC Square / CryptopolitanFR /
Le FMI presse la Chine de passer des exportations à la demande intérieure

Le FMI presse la Chine de passer des exportations à la demande intérieure

Published:
2025-10-15 01:03:27
19
3

IMF urges China to shift from exports to domestic demand

Le FMI sonne l'alarme : la Chine doit rééquilibrer son économie

Virage stratégique obligatoire

Le Fonds Monétaire International presse Pékin d'opérer un changement radical - abandonner le modèle exportateur pour se tourner vers la consommation domestique. Une transition qui s'annonce aussi délicate que nécessaire.

Les experts du FMI estiment que l'économie chinoise a atteint un point d'inflexion. Le vieux modèle, basé sur les exportations massives, montre ses limites face aux tensions géopolitiques et aux restructurations des chaînes d'approvisionnement mondiales.

Réveiller le géant endormi

Stimuler la demande intérieure représente le nouveau graal économique. Le défi ? Transformer une nation d'épargnants en une société de consommateurs - un pari aussi audacieux que complexe.

Les autorités chinoises devront jongler entre réformes structurelles et maintien de la stabilité sociale. Un exercice d'équilibriste qui rappelle que même les dragons doivent parfois se réinventer.

Parce qu'en finance, quand les conseils sont gratuits, c'est souvent qu'on vous vend quelque chose...

Sluggish domestic demand hampers recovery

The IMF described China’s prospects as “worrisome,” citing mounting financial stability risks and tepid consumer spending. The economy is hovering on the edge of a debt-deflation trap, Gourinchas said, with property values falling, anemic credit demand, and corporate borrowing constraints dragging the rebound.

The property crisis in China — once a giant source of urban wealth — still looms large. Many developers are struggling to complete housing projects, banks are saddled with bad loans, and households are holding back from spending or investing. The uncertainty that resulted has dragged down confidence among consumers and businesses alike.

The IMF also noted that, although Beijing’s heavy spending on strategic industries, including electric vehicles and renewable energy, has been lucrative in some sectors, it could be misallocating resources and contributing to fiscal pressures. Subsidies and state-directed investment, the Fund said, can distort competition and block out small private firms.

The IMF suggested that China embark on a so-called “transitional fiscal expansion and permanent fiscal recomposition”,  which it said would entail temporarily raising government spending to lift private household consumption before transitioning long-term fiscal priorities toward social safety nets and income support.

China’s export growth, too, has started to sputter. While overall exports in September rose from the period a year earlier, shipments to the United States plummeted more than 27% from a year ago, according to data provided by China’s customs authority. Analysts say one reason, apart from geopolitical factors, is lower overall global demand.

At the same time, concern has been rising in both the European Union and the United States about an influx of low-cost Chinese goods — primarily electric vehicles and solar panels — that are undercutting domestic industries. Such an outcome, the IMF warned, could exacerbate trade frictions unless China’s domestic market creates enough demand to soak up more of its output.

Beijing faces tough policy choices

China’s leaders have recognized the challenge. Premier Li Qiang recently told officials that expanding domestic demand is crucial for maintaining sustainable growth and promised targeted fiscal support for households and small businesses.

However, economists argue that much deeper structural reforms are necessary in 2020 to make this a reality. These measures could be increasing household income, reforming social security to lower precautionary savings, and providing greater flexibility to the private sector, which would play a role in both innovation and employment.

The IMF’s Managing Director, Kristalina Georgieva, expressed a similar sentiment this year when she said that the Fund has been very vocal about China needing to change its economic model. She emphasized that measures to boost consumer confidence and increase transparency in the financial industry were also crucial for sustainable growth.

Yet Beijing must make painful political and social choices. Slowing growth in the short term may also require reducing state-led industrial investment. However, without reform, the IMF argues, China could remain stuck in a cycle of low demand, low prices, and rising debts.

Join a premium crypto trading community free for 30 days - normally $100/mo.

|Square

Obtenez l'application BTCC pour commencer votre expérience avec les cryptomonnaies

Commencer aujourd'hui Scannez pour rejoindre nos + de 100 millions d’utilisateurs

Avertissement : Les articles reproduits sur ce site proviennent de réseaux publics et sont partagés dans le seul but de transmettre des informations sectorielles, sans représenter une position officielle de BTCC. Les droits de création reviennent à leurs auteurs respectifs. Si vous constatez des violations de droits d’auteur ou de contenu litigieux, veuillez nous contacter à [email protected] pour que nous puissions traiter la demande conformément à la loi. BTCC ne garantit pas l'exactitude, l'actualité ou l'exhaustivité des informations reproduites et décline toute responsabilité, explicite ou implicite, découlant de l'utilisation de ces informations. Tous les contenus sont fournis à titre de référence pour la recherche sectorielle et ne constituent en aucun cas une suggestion d'investissement, de décision juridique ou commerciale. BTCC ne saurait être tenu responsable des actes entrepris sur la base de ces informations.