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China has a $43,000 wealth gap problem

A Cartier store in an upscale shopping district of Beijing, where per-capita GDP is slightly over $53,000 — similar to Switzerland and the U.S. — while in some rural provinces GDP was below $10,000 — nearer that of Guatemala.
(Kevin Frayer / Getty Images)
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China is no monolith. While residents in Shanghai and Beijing are almost as well off as those in Switzerland by some income measures, parts of the country live more like they were in Guatemala.

The economic might of the mainland’s 31 provincial-level territories ranges from rust-belt areas in the northeast to farming areas in the central plains to Silicon Valley wannabes sprouting up in support of companies such as Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., Tencent Holdings Ltd. and Huawei Technologies Co.

The wide disparity puts some residents at the cutting edge of the developed world, stepping into battery-powered cars that silently ease down city streets, or as consumers facing advertising choices generated by image-recognition technology. Across China, close to 1 billion consumers shop or pay for purchases using apps on their smartphones.

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At the other extreme are rural towns where water still needs to be carried on foot from a well.

“Development in some of the major cities can now match anywhere in the world, but that’s not the whole story,” said Qian Wan, analyst for Bloomberg Economics, who specializes in provincial research. “In part of the inland areas, even some places along the coast, urbanization — and therefore incomes — lags far behind.”

As of early 2018, cumulative lending by the World Bank to help development in China surpassed $60 billion for 416 projects.

At the high end are Shanghai and Beijing. Gross domestic product per-capita adjusted for purchasing power — one measure of average incomes — were slightly more than $53,000 last year. That’s similar levels to Switzerland and the U.S. At that level, in fact, those cities would rank among the top 10 of all countries with populations of at least 3 million people, according to Bloomberg analysis of data sourced from the International Monetary Fund and China’s National Bureau of Statistics.

Shanghai, the mainland’s biggest financial center, and Beijing, the nation’s capital, lead the list in large part because they are more compact and benefit from supportive government policies. They have the best universities, the highest-paying jobs and, until recently, unmatched infrastructure development.

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For at least two decades, general laborers and highly skilled workers have been lured to help the big cities grow, though most have second-class status. Most lack the difficult-to-acquire household registrations, or “hukou,” meaning they don’t have access to legal residents’ rights to social services and education resources.

Travelers headed to their hometowns for the Spring Festival holiday board trains in Beijing. Income gaps between Chinese workers in inland provinces and those in Beijing and Shanghai have narrowed dramatically in the last 10 years
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times )

“There are places farmers can move, now, and transfer to being fully urban, but there is a point system for elite cities like Beijing and Shanghai,” John Giles, a World Bank economist, said at a recent conference on China’s anti-poverty campaign in Washington. “You have urban residents who don’t want those migrant kids in school with their children.”

China’s yawning economic disparities aren’t just of academic interest — they form the basis for one of Xi Jinping’s three “critical battles,” namely poverty alleviation. And as the economy slows, policies that bring the incomes of those in Gansu closer of those in Shanghai will help ensure that the whole pie grows in a sustainable way.

“While early waves of migrants flocked to more affluent coastal and higher-tier cities, more migrants are now choosing to stay within their home provinces,” Hyde Chen, an equity analyst for UBS AG in Hong Kong, wrote in a report that compared urban development trends.

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“Historical experiences from mature economies suggest that household incomes of wealthy and poor areas in China will likely converge over time,” Chen said. “In China, the income convergence is taking place at a fast pace, with the household per-capita income gap between lower-tier cities and tier-1 cities narrowing from 56% in 2005 to 46% in 2017.”

Just 10 years ago, it would’ve taken a dozen workers in Guizhou province to earn what one worker in Shanghai made. By 2017, that wealth gap had narrowed by half.

Still, the gap remains wide.

Guizhou and Yunnan provinces in the south and Gansu in the north each had per-capita GDP income below $10,000 last year, ranking them among Ukraine, El Salvador and Guatemala. But with a combined population of 110 million — nearing that of Japan, with average income of $39,000 — those three provinces have tremendous potential.

Starbucks Corp. Chief Financial Officer Scott Maw said investing in coffee-growing areas of Yunnan has been a boon to both his company and the region.

“I’m sure we benefit from that, but the vast majority of the coffee that is produced under those improved practices goes to others,” he said at a UBS conference on consumers and retail in March. “In a couple of years, you’ll have 600 million middle-class customers in China.”

China is changing from a land of villages and farming plots to one dominated by mega-cities and rapidly growing towns. Overall urbanization stands at 59%, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, with Guangdong — the most-populous province — the most citified: Its urban ratio is 70%. By comparison, the U.S. is at 82%, Thailand 50% and India 33%, according to the United Nations.

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“The drivers behind this shift likely include improved infrastructure and transport networks, better economic integration, and policymakers’ initiatives to rebalance regional development,” Chen said.

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