Most economic analyses of China focus on trade wars or debt bubbles, but Shirvan Neftchi's latest piece for CaspianReport cuts through the noise to ask a far more existential question: can a nation get rich before its population literally disappears? The argument is not just about GDP targets; it is a chilling demographic forecast suggesting that Beijing may have missed its window to transition from a factory of the world to a consumer powerhouse.
The Illusion of Growth
Neftchi opens with a striking visual from 2021, where a dozen high-rise buildings in Kunming were demolished not because they were unsafe, but because they were "in the way of a 5% GDP target." This anecdote serves as the perfect metaphor for the author's central thesis: "Build fast, build big, and worry about purpose later." The piece argues that for decades, China's economic engine ran on a flawed metric where "construction or destruction, GDP doesn't care what the activity is. It just counts the money."
This framing is effective because it exposes the artificiality of the previous growth model. Neftchi points out that local officials exploited this loophole, tearing down and rebuilding infrastructure just to hit numbers, creating a "loophole" that resulted in "none of this is productive growth. It's not real. It doesn't benefit the public in the long run." The commentary here is sharp; it forces the reader to reconsider what "economic growth" actually means when the output is merely a statistical artifact rather than tangible value.
"GDP growth is not always productive growth. You can build a highway, tear it down, rebuild it exactly as before, tear it down again, and do this over and over, and it will all register as economic growth."
Critics might argue that infrastructure investment, even if inefficient, creates jobs and stimulates short-term activity, but Neftchi's point holds weight regarding long-term sustainability. The transition away from this model is now urgent, yet the path forward is fraught with difficulty.
The Consumption Trap
The core of Neftchi's analysis shifts to the mechanics of becoming a high-income nation. He notes that while China aims to double its GDP per capita by 2035, the mechanism for doing so must change. "Going from a production-based model to a consumption-based model, is perhaps the most complicated phase in becoming a highincome country. It's easier to build a machine than it is to convince people to use it." This distinction is crucial. The author highlights that China's household consumption accounts for only 39% of its GDP, a figure that pales in comparison to the United States at 68% or even Japan at 53%.
The text attributes this hesitation to a cultural and historical trauma, noting that "saving isn't just a habit, it's almost instinctive." Furthermore, the pandemic lockdowns shattered consumer confidence, leading to a deflationary spiral where "prices have fallen for 18 months in a row." Neftchi explains the danger of this scenario well: "When people expect prices to keep dropping, they often delay spending, hoping to get a better deal later... Eventually, economic momentum grinds to a halt."
The administration's response, as detailed by Neftchi, involves a three-pronged plan to "Give them more money to spend, encourage them to save less, and move money from people who save it to people who spend it." However, the author suggests that fiscal stimuli worth 2% of GDP may be insufficient against the psychological weight of uncertainty. A counterargument worth considering is that structural reforms to social safety nets take years to implement, while the economic pressure is immediate.
The Demographic Clock
Perhaps the most alarming section of the piece addresses the ticking clock of demographics. Neftchi writes, "China may be too old to get rich." With birth rates falling for three consecutive years, the author projects a population shrinkage to roughly 760 million by 2100. The comparison to Japan and South Korea is stark: "Countries with younger populations... experienced rapid economic growth thanks to large working age populations. But as their populations aged and the labor pool diminished, growth slowed sharply."
The author notes that China's median age now mirrors Japan's in 1995 and Germany's in 2000, periods that preceded decades of stagnation or modest growth. The proposed solution from Beijing is a heavy reliance on technology. "Beijing's solution to its aging population is innovation. It is investing heavily in AI and robotics to offset the economic drag of its elderly demographic." Yet, Neftchi delivers a sobering reality check on this strategy: "AI and robots don't consume like people do. They consume electricity, but that doesn't drive demand in the economy the way human spending does."
This is the piece's most profound insight. Technology can solve the supply side of the equation, but it cannot manufacture the demand side. As Neftchi concludes, "It's never been done before" to try to achieve high-income status with a shrinking workforce.
Bottom Line
Shirvan Neftchi's analysis is a masterclass in connecting demographic data to economic policy, successfully arguing that China's greatest hurdle is not external tariffs but internal demographic collapse. The strongest part of the argument is the distinction between technological innovation and consumer demand, a nuance often missed in broader geopolitical discussions. However, the piece perhaps underestimates the potential for state-directed social engineering to alter deep-seated cultural saving habits. The world should watch not just China's GDP numbers, but its birth rates and household spending data, as these will determine if the "rich club" remains out of reach.