China's achievements in economic development and poverty reduction are historically unprecedented. Nevertheless, it must not be forgotten from what an extremely low base China began its modern development in 1949, after a century of foreign invasions and wars.
In 1950, only 10 countries for which data are available had a lower per capita GDP than China. This underlines the country's extraordinary progress in that, by 2015, it had already achieved an "upper middle income" status under World Bank standards, with higher per capita GDP than countries containing the majority of the world's population. As Figure 1 shows, China has been steadily closing the gap with the world's most advanced economy, the U.S.
Figure 1
But despite this, by 2015 China's per capita GDP was still only 14 percent of the U.S. figure at current exchange rates and, more significantly for long term development, only 25 percent of the U.S. when using the purchasing power parity (PPP) calculation.
This means China's overall productivity level is approximately one-sixth of the U.S. at current exchange rates and a quarter based on PPPs. Thus, China's decisive task for several decades is to close the productivity gap with the most advanced economies.
Productivity in advanced economies
This determines what will be China's most crucial economic sectors. A key feature even for the most advanced economies is that manufacturing productivity rises more rapidly than non-manufacturing (chiefly services) productivity.
Taking the U.S., the world's most advanced economy, Figure 2 shows that ever since 1990, often thought as witnessing the height of the "internet revolution," the increase in U.S. manufacturing productivity was far higher than the average for the economy. As the U.S. total non-farm economy includes manufacturing, a higher than average productivity growth sector, average productivity growth in U.S. non-manufacturing is even lower than for the whole non-farm economy.
Even during the period of slow growth since the international financial crisis after 2007 the growth rate of U.S. manufacturing productivity was almost half as fast again as in non-manufacturing, while in the faster growth period 1990-2007 U.S. productivity growth in manufacturing was almost twice that of non-manufacturing.
Figure 2
This fact that productivity increases in manufacturing are much higher than in non-manufacturing conditions China's decisive economic objectives. The McKinsey Global Institute for example calculates the long term potential for China's economic sectors as shown in Table 1. The highest potential for China's annual productivity growth outside agriculture is 8 percent in R&D-driven manufactured goods, 6 percent in capital intensive commodities, and 5 percent in consumer goods. This compares to only 4 percent in non-financial services and 1 percent in financial services.
Table 1
Energy supply
China has several key R&D-driven manufacturing sectors; however, renewable energy supply is crucial.
Domestically China's electrical energy supply still lags considerably behind the most advanced economies. China's per capita electrical power supply is only 31 percent of U.S. levels – compared to Germany's 56 percent, Japan's 62 percent and South Korea's 76 percent. China cannot move towards advanced economy levels of productivity without a huge increase in power supply.
China already leads the world in total power supply – over 30 percent larger than the U.S., but needs to triple output to match the U.S. in per capita power supply.
Yet, the present structure of China's power supply is highly undesirable from the environmental viewpoint. In 2013, the World Bank reported 75 percent of Chinese electrical power was coal generated compared to Germany's 47 percent, America's 40 percent and Japan's 32 percent. Even with modern, and expensive, methods of treating coal burning, this is environmentally undesirable.
What are the alternative renewable energy sources? China has an advantage in hydroelectric power (17 percent compared to Germany's 4 percent, America's 6 percent and Japan's 8 percent). But the proportion of China's electricity supply generated by other renewable sources lags other major economies.
In 2012, World Bank data showed China produced only 2.7 percent of its electricity supply from non-hydroelectric renewable sources compared to Japan's 4.6 percent, America's 5.5 percent, and Germany's 19.5 percent. This is despite China being by far the world's largest solar panel manufacturer.
Solar panels
In June 2016, Bloomberg Technology noted estimates of the International Renewable Energy Agency that: "The average cost of electricity from a photovoltaic system is forecast to plunge as much as 59 percent by 2025." Therefore: "The amount of electricity generated using solar panels stands to expand as much as six-fold by 2030 as the cost of production falls below competing natural gas and coal-fired plants."
China became the world's largest producer of solar panels in 2009. Liang Zhipeng, the National Energy Administration's renewable energy division deputy director, estimated that, in 2015, it accounted for 70 percent of global output of solar panels – totalling 43 gigawatts.
As solar power is undergoing rapid technological innovation, with major improvements in power to price ratio, R&D capacity is decisive. Alongside China's scale of production, its academic-based R&D in the renewable energy field already leads the world.
KIC InnoEnergy, established by the European Institute of Innovation and Technology to initiate new ways to achieve European innovation, concluded that the Chinese Academy of Sciences was the world's number one academic research center in sustainable energy:
"Chinese research institutions are considerably ahead of their European and U.S. peers in sustainable energy innovation, including wind, ocean and solar power as well as smart grids and intelligent buildings." It found nine of the world's top 15 academic research institutions in the field were in China.
There was still weakness in transferring academic research into companies but Diego Pavia, head of KIC InnoEnergy, noted: "Chinese researchers have told us: ‘we have learned as much as we can from Europe, now we have to lead and create innovation'… But they have decided to do it, so I have no doubt they will."
In 2015 China accounted for more than a quarter of global solar installations, and it plans to more than triple its solar power capacity by 2020, adding 15 to 20 gigawatts of photovoltaic power annually in the next five years.
Development of renewable energy, is decisive for the fight against climate change. Economically, with a rapidly expanding global market, the world's largest home market, unequalled scale of production, and already established research capacity, solar power is crucial to China's future.
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This article originally appeared on China.org.cn.
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