Low rates, rising savings signal China may be heading into a liquidity trap
New Delhi, July 19
China is showing increasing signs of slipping into a liquidity trap, with record-low interest rates, abundant bank liquidity and aggressive credit expansion failing to revive consumer spending, business investment or economic growth, according to recent economic data.
The world's second-largest economy grew 4.3 per cent in the second quarter of 2026, falling short of Beijing's annual growth target of around 5 per cent and marking its weakest quarterly expansion in nearly three-and-a-half years, as per Dunham report.
The slowdown comes despite years of monetary easing by the People's Bank of China (PBOC), which has kept borrowing costs at historic lows while encouraging banks to extend fresh credit.
A liquidity trap occurs when interest rates are already very low and financial institutions have ample funds to lend, but households and businesses remain reluctant to borrow, invest or spend.
In such a situation, monetary policy loses much of its effectiveness as additional liquidity fails to stimulate economic activity, the report stated.
China's latest economic indicators suggest that this pattern may be emerging. The country's broad money supply (M2) expanded 8.6 per cent year-on-year at the end of May, while banks issued 10.72 trillion yuan in new loans during the first six months of 2026.
However, domestic demand has remained subdued, with consumers preferring to save rather than spend despite cheaper borrowing costs.
Recent surveys indicate that more than 80 per cent of respondents would rather increase savings than consumption, highlighting weak consumer confidence even as benchmark lending rates remain near record lows.
The one-year loan prime rate stands at 3 per cent, while the five-year mortgage-linked rate is 3.5 per cent.
The prolonged downturn in China's property market has further weighed on household sentiment.
New home prices declined 3.3 per cent year-on-year in June, marking the 36th consecutive month of falling prices.
With nearly 70 per cent of household wealth linked to real estate, the sustained correction has eroded consumer confidence and curtailed discretionary spending, the report mentioned.
— IANS
Reader Comments
Even with 3% loan rates, people prefer to save? That's shocking! In India, we'd snap up cheap loans in a second. Shows how psychological consumer confidence is. The property crash particularly scary - imagine 70% of household wealth tied to real estate falling for 3 years straight.
Classic liquidity trap - Japan syndrome. When people lose faith in asset prices and future growth prospects, even zero interest rates won't make them borrow. China's demographic challenges and real estate overhang are major structural issues. India should learn from this.
Honestly, the Chinese consumer has gotten smarter. After years of over-leverage in property and shadow banking, they're finally saving. But this hurts growth. We should watch how they navigate this - may need fiscal stimulus like direct cash transfers. RBI should take notes.
China's policymakers are in a bind. Keep rates low - nobody borrows. Raise rates - crash property market further. The Great Wall of savings isn't helping. India's story is different - our savers are still buying gold and FDs! 😂
This is a wake-up call for all export-dependent economies. If China's domestic consumption doesn't pick up, global demand will suffer too. And with 80% preferring savings over spending, that's a lot of idle money. Maybe India can benefit if they shift some manufacturing here?
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