One Big Difference Between Chinese and American Households_ Debt - Forbes

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    8/27/13 One Big Difference Between Chinese and American Households: Debt - Forbes

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    In the fall of 2009, I was invited to Beijing by Tsinghua University to present a

    keynote address at the first China Consumer Finance Forum. It was a

    personal honor and it presented an opportunity for this Missouri boy to meet

    some Chinese leaders in the field of finance. One of the nicest by-products of

    thetrip was to gain access to the first iteration of the Survey of Chinese

    Consumer Finances, collected by Tsinghua University and funded by Citibank

    (China) Co., Ltd. The data provide insights into their culture and, upon

    reflection, clues about our own.

    The data were collected from slightly more than 2,000 households residing in

    fifteen cities within China, all Class-One and Class-Two cities. The data

    represent the urban Chinese, having greater wealth and income than their

    rural counterparts. In this group, 73% were married, compared with 59% in

    the Unites States. Fifty-five percent of the Chinese stopped school with a

    high-school education or less, while in the United States 46% stopped with a

    high-school education or less. The average annual household income in

    China, converted to dollars, was $10,220, compared with $84,300 in the

    United States (the median US income is $47,300.) One of the few similarities

    was average household assets: in both China and the U.S., the average

    familys assets were about eight times its average income.

    At face value, the similarities between China and the United States, with

    respect to relative levels of assets to income, as well as demographics, areremarkable. The level of debt to average income, however, is not. The

    average US household debt is 136% of household income, compared to 17%

    for the Chinese. Moreover, if we include federal borrowing, the United States

    number increases an additional $109,792 per household, to $224,303 per

    household or 266% of average household income.

    We need to ask the question, Is this sustainable? And where is all of this debt

    coming from?

    For starters, we found that while 85% of Chinese households surveyed owned

    a home, only 11% carried a mortgage on that property. In the United States

    PERSONAL FINANCE

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    6/24/2010 @ 12:08PM | 31,845 views

    One Big Difference BetweenChinese and AmericanHouseholds: Debt

    Robert O. Weagley, C ontributor

    MoneyBuilderWE HE LP YOU MA KE SE N SE OF YOU R FIN A N CE S.

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  • 7/24/2019 One Big Difference Between Chinese and American Households_ Debt - Forbes

    2/2

    8/27/13 One Big Difference Between Chinese and American Households: Debt - Forbes

    www.forbes.com/si tes/moneybui lder /2010/06/24/one-big-difference-between-chinese-and-amer ican-households-debt/pr int/

    69% were homeowners in 2007, with 70% of them carrying some debt on the

    property, in the form of a mortgage or a home-equity loan. Some of this is a

    result of Chinese employer home purchase plans for employees, in an effort

    to provide housing while limiting indebtedness. In the United States,

    however, mortgage debt is encouraged through a subsidy in our tax code that,

    in fact, provides the greatest subsidy to those with the largest mortgage and,

    typically, the highest incomes.

    Less than 1% of urban Chinese use consumer loans to purchase consumer

    goods, while 47% of all US families have installment loans and 46% carry acredit card balance. Admittedly, consumer credit is necessary to smooth our

    consumption stream shifting income from high periods to periods where it

    is relatively low. In fact, a member of the Bank of China confided to me that

    increasing the borrowing of the younger Chinese is a goal of the Chinese

    government to enable them to not be dependent on the west to support our

    growth.

    Roughly 12% of the Chinese sample owned a car with only 0.7% of the

    population (6% of the automobile purchasers) borrowing money to purchase

    a car. In the United States, anywhere from 73% to 91% of new car purchases

    involve financing.

    The good news is that, in the United States, credit use is decreasing and

    savings rates are up. Revolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 12% in

    March and non-revolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 7%. In

    addition, April of 2010 saw a household savings rate of 3.6%, compared to

    3.1% in March, and it has remained over 3% since the fourth quarter of 2008.

    In China, however, households save between 25% to 50% of their income.

    With respect to the question of why Chinas saving rate is so high, the answers

    range from the existence of an excess of males to females, the lack of Social

    Security, the lack of government provided medical care, or a culturally bound

    ethic in improving the future for their family.

    Whatever it is, Westerners should be grateful for Chinese savings, as it is used

    to loan money to the United States, thus allowing us to continue down the

    road our nation has chosen.

    This article is available online at:

    http://www.forbes .com/sites/moneybuilder/2010/06/24/one-big-difference-between-chinese-

    and-american-households-debt/

    http://www.forbes.com/sites/moneybuilder/2010/06/24/one-big-difference-between-chinese-and-american-households-debt/