The Economist

(Steven Felgate) #1

44 The EconomistAugust 4th 2018


1

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T

IANJIN a northern mega-city has pro-
duced some of China’s wittiest comedi-
ans. It is a good thing that its 15m residents
have a sense of humour. Their hometown
was at points over the past decade the
fastest-growing of China’s 31 provincial-
level regions. Since the beginning of last
year it has been the slowest (see chart).
Businesses joke that the sole part of the lo-
cal economy that is expanding these days
is the value of assets seized from corrupt of-
ficials. The city’s sharp deceleration serves
as a stress test of China’s economic pro-
blems and as a warning of the difficulty in
fixing them.
Other areas of China are also grappling
with subdued growth. Commodity-pro-
ducing regions have struggled to adapt to a
modernising economy as has the rust-belt
north-east. But Tianjin stands out as a place
that should be doing better. It boasts a busy
port and good universities. A skilled
manufacturing hub it has attracted firms
from Airbus to Motorola. Just half an hour
from Beijing by train it is well situated.
The problem is that the city’s planners
got far ahead of themselves. They built a
big new financial district which they
billed as China’s Manhattan in the Binhai
district on the city’s far-east side. Nearly
70% of offices there are vacant according to
Jones Lang LaSalle a property-services

stopped a few yearsago. The skyscraper’s
skeleton is nearly 600 metres tall and sur-
rounded by a dozen other abandoned
building sites which are a short drive from
a fledgling polo club itself ringed by empty
luxury residences.
Corruption fuelled the excesses. In the
city centre Zhao Jin a property magnate
paid off bureaucrats to flout zoning rules.
He had permission to build three towers of
no more than 35 storeys but instead went
for 66 storeys. He and the bureaucrats
(some of them anyway) are now in jail; his
development an unfinished eyesore was
listed for demolition. In another case at
the port managers of a chemical ware-
house exploited connections to pass in-
spections on matters from fire safety to
chemicals handling. In August 2015 a mas-
sive explosion obliterated the warehouse
and the surrounding area killing 173.
The deadly blast seems to have marked
a turning point. Huang Xingguo mayor
since 2007 was jailed last year for corrup-
tion. Li Hongzhong Tianjin’s new Com-
munist Party boss has presided over a
clean-up. Corruption investigations in the
first half of this year have already exceeded
the total for 2015. The government has also
changed its economic course. It has tight-
ened its belt budgeting nearly 15% less
spending this year. Once-busy building
sites have attracted scavengers. Ads for
metal-recycling services are plastered on
construction walls in the high-tech zone.
Tianjin along with a handful of other
Chinese regions has admitted that its eco-
nomic record was grossly inflated. Binhai
which accountsfor halfthe city’soutput
declared in January that itsGDPwas a third
smaller than previously reported. Partly as
a result of correcting for past fabrication

firm. That flatters the reality. One whole
floor of the New Finance Building a glis-
tening complex has been converted into
“escape rooms” for adventure games. “The
buildings are great” Zhang Junkai a port
worker who lives nearby says with a wry
smile. “It’s just that we don’t have enough
people in them.”
Some 60km away on the city’s western
fringes the waste iseven more striking. A
private developer wanted to create a high-
tech zone anchored by the world’s fifth-
tallest skyscraper. Construction all but

Trouble in Tianjin

Where are the people?


TIANJIN
What used to be China’s fastest-growing region is now its slowest

China


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First to worst

*Estimate to
June 30th

Sources: CEIC; Economist
Intelligence Unit

Tianjin ranking of GDP growth among
Chinese provinces

31

25

20

15

10

5

1

2000 05 10 15 18*
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