China's leaders to endorse lower 2021-2025 growth target
at key meeting: sources
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[September 28, 2020] By
Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's leaders are
poised to endorse a lower economic growth target for Beijing's next
five-year plan compared with 2016-2020, as authorities navigate growing
challenges fuelled by a deepening rift with the United States, policy
sources said.
President Xi Jinping and other leaders are expected to discuss and
approve China's economic and social development blueprint for 2021-2025
at a key Communist Party conclave in October, the sources told Reuters.
State news agency Xinhua said on Monday the meeting will be held from
Oct. 26-29.
Policymakers believe that setting a five-year growth target is vital for
steering the world's second-largest economy past the 'middle income
trap', the sources said, after internal debate over whether it should
abandon such targets to enable more flexibility.
The target also keeps local governments focused on development goals at
a time of a deepening rift between China and the United States over a
broad range of issues, they said.
"There will be an economic target. Where is the direction of development
if there is no such anchor?" said one source who is involved in the
debate.
Government think tanks and economists have made recommendations for
average annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth targets including
"around 5%", 5-5.5% to 5-6%, the sources said.
China is targeting average annual growth of over 6.5% for the 13th
five-year plan that ends this year.
China's State Council Information Office did not immediately respond to
a request for comment.
Some government advisers have argued that China should do away with
official growth targets - a legacy of decades of central economic
planning - to reduce reliance on debt-fueled stimulus and encourage more
productive investment.
Reform advocates hope President Xi's proposed "dual circulation"
strategy, expected to be the centrepiece at the conclave, is an
opportunity to quicken reforms to spur domestic demand and unleash fresh
growth engines.
In May, China abandoned its annual GDP growth target, for 2020, for the
first time in 18 years due to a heavy blow from the coronavirus crisis,
although some economists suspected the government has maintained an
implicit goal of around 3%.
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A general view of buildings in Shanghai, China August 11, 2020.
REUTER/Aly Song
The five-year plan is expected to be unveiled at the annual parliament meeting
in early 2021. A growth target for 2021 itself, also to be unveiled at the
parliament session, is likely to be set by top leaders at an annual economic
conference in December.
"We expect the government to either not set an explicit growth target or set a
lower and more flexible (e.g., around 5%) growth target" for 2021-2025, analysts
at UBS said in a note to clients.
'CRITICAL PERIOD'
China faces growing headwinds to maintain its ascent as the United States
ratchets up pressure on trade, technology and other fronts, threatening a
decoupling of the world's two largest economies.
Annual growth of about 5% would be enough for China to bypass the "middle income
trap" that has befallen countries such as Argentina, Brazil and South Africa,
which have struggled to boost productivity and shift towards higher value-added
industries.
The World Bank defines high-income countries as those with per capita gross
national income (GNI) of above $12,535. China's per capita income reached
$10,410 in 2019, according to the World Bank.
The State Council's Development Research Centre, the cabinet's think tank, said
in a recent report that it expects China to become a high income nation by 2024
and overtake the United States as the world's largest economy by 2032.
"The 14th five-year plan period will be a critical period for China to deal with
frictions with the United States and make strategic arrangements," the think
tank said in the report.
Analysts expect China's GDP to grow 2-3% in 2020, the weakest since 1976, but
growth could rebound to over 7% in 2021 thanks to a lower base, but the longer
term trend is for slower growth as the population ages and the economy matures.
(Reporting by Kevin Yao; Editing by Shri Navaratnam and Toby Chopra)
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