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Asian households binge on debt

What should be good news for the global economy has its downsides

ONE of the more persistent beliefs about the global economy is that Asians are

more frugal than others. Explanations have drawn on culture (the

self-discipline of Confucianism), history (memories of privation) and public

policy (flimsy social safety-nets forcing people to save). For Lee Kuan Yew,

the founding father of Singapore, and other theorists of Asian values , thrift

was one of them. Whatever the true reason, data long supported the basic claim

that Asian households were indeed careful with their cash. But over the past

few years consumers across the region have done their best to prove that

prudence was perhaps just a passing phase.

Household debt in advanced economies has generally declined as a percentage of

GDP since the 2008 global financial crisis, according to the Bank for

International Settlements. In a number of Asian countries, however, it has been

going in the opposite direction (see chart). The biggest increase has been in

China, where households have borrowed about $4.5trn over the past decade. But

Chinese households were starting from an extremely low base. Relative to income

levels, South Korea, Thailand and Malaysia have reached much loftier heights.

Over the same period, consumer borrowing has also risen in Hong Kong and

Singapore.

The increase in debt is, to a certain extent, healthy. An oft-heard criticism

of Asian economies is that, in terms of global growth, they have been punching

below their weight. They produce lots of stuff but rely on profligate

Westerners to buy it. The rise in debt has, so far at least, helped change that

dynamic, fuelling more consumption. Retail spending in Asia, excluding Japan,

has grown by about 10% a year over the past half-decade. Greater access to

credit has made it easier to buy homes, cars and clothes.

But debt can also be dangerous. A recent paper by the IMF observed that, in the

short term, an increase in household borrowing props up economic growth and

keeps unemployment down. After a while, though, these gains are reversed. The

IMF study found that a five-percentage-point increase in the household

debt-to-GDP ratio over three years tends to result in a 1.25-percentage-point

decline in real growth three years in the future. And an increase of a single

percentage point in household debt increases the likelihood of a banking crisis

by a similar percentage.

In Asia financial fragility is not the main worry. Even if households have been

indulging themselves more freely, most regulators have remained prudent. In

South Korea they mandate that mortgages cannot exceed 70% of a property s

value. Singaporean homebuyers who borrow from banks must make downpayments of

at least 20% and potentially much more if they already have outstanding loans.

Asian banks are also reluctant to pursue the kind of subprime lending that made

consumer debt so toxic in America a decade ago.

The bigger risk in Asia is interest rates, says Frederic Neumann, co-head of

Asian economic research at HSBC. He notes that fixed long-term rates are rare

in the region. Most consumer loans have shorter durations, so if central banks

start to increase rates, debt-servicing costs for households will quickly rise.

That will eat into incomes and act as a drag on consumption.

It is already possible to detect headwinds. Mortgage payments in China have

reached about 4.5% of total annual household income, up from 3.6% in 2015,

according to Ernan Cui of Gavekal Dragonomics, a research firm. That, in turn,

is beginning to weigh on consumption. For the government this entails a

trade-off. The increase in mortgages has helped reduce a glut of unsold homes,

which posed a graver danger to the economy than does consumer debt.

There is also an uglier side to the rise in household borrowing. As in other

parts of the world, unscrupulous lenders prey on the most vulnerable. In South

Korea the share of low-income households struggling under heavy debt burdens

has been creeping up. Choi Pae-kun, an economist at Konkuk University in Seoul,

points out that poorer people may have no choice other than to borrow to cover

living and medical costs. In China online lenders have been involved in a

series of scandals. Some have demanded exorbitant interest rates and, in a

number of cases, forced students to post as collateral naked selfies, with the

threat they could be distributed if dues are not paid. Debt can undermine Asian

values in more ways than one.

https://www.economist.com/news/finance-and-economics/

21730932-what-should-be-good-news-global-economy-has-its-downsides-asian-households