Exclusive: China likely to avoid setting 2021 GDP target over debt
concerns, sources say
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[January 28, 2021] By
Kevin Yao
BEIJING (Reuters) - China will likely avoid
setting a 2021 growth target, dropping the closely watched measure for a
second straight year on concerns that maintaining one could encourage
provincial economies to ramp up debt, policy sources told Reuters.
The world's second-biggest economy eked out 2.3% growth last year
despite the ravages of the pandemic that emerged in the central city of
Wuhan, and will rebound a sharp 8.4% this year thanks to Beijing's
aggressive COVID-19 response and global recovery, according to a Reuters
poll of economists.
But policymakers fear that pegging official ambitions to a specific rate
of growth could encourage regional governments to pursue even higher
growth, in turn prompting an unhealthy rise in debt to hit the target,
two sources said.
Government advisers who call for scrapping the gross domestic product
(GDP) target again this year appear to be gaining the upper hand, while
policymakers may again signal a goal implicitly by targeting employment
and other indicators, said the sources, who asked not to be identified
because the discussions are confidential.
"We will not set an explicit target, but in reality there will be a
target," said a government adviser, one of three sources saying the
target will again be scrapped. "We will not emphasise the importance of
achieving a target at all costs."
But internal discussions are continuing ahead of China's annual
parliament meeting in early March, and one source said the National
Development and Reform Commission, the top state planner, remains keen
to have a growth target.
The commission and the information office of China's State Council did
not immediately respond to requests for comment.
DEBT WORRIES
Even before the pandemic, internal calls to scrap growth targets - a
legacy of decades of central planning in the Communist Party-ruled
country - had been growing since President Xi Jinping pledged in 2017 to
pursue "higher-quality" growth, reducing reliance on debt-fuelled
stimulus and encouraging more productive investment.
China set no target last year, for the first time in 18 years, as
COVID-19 roiled the global economy, sending China into a sharp
contraction before it mounted a robust recovery thanks to strict virus
controls and heavy demand for Chinese-made goods from countries
struggling with the outbreak.
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A worker wearing a face mask works on a production line
manufacturing bicycle steel rim at a factory, as the country is hit
by the novel coronavirus outbreak, in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province,
China March 2, 2020. China Daily via REUTERS/File Photo
Still, many economists suspect the government maintained an implicit growth goal
of around 3% in 2020.
The government is expected to target inflation around 3% this year, below last
year's goal of about 3.5% but above the actual 2.5% rise in consumer prices, the
sources told Reuters.
Among the options proposed by advisers, they said: a GDP target around 8%, in
line with forecasts, or no forecast.
Policymakers plan to set an average annual growth target of around 5% for the
14th five-year plan starting this year, Reuters reported in November.
Ma Jun, an influential policy adviser to the central bank, told a recent forum
that China should abolish GDP targets, switching to employment and inflation as
the main policy goals.
"If we use GDP growth as an official target, local governments may ... set very
high GDP targets, thus increasing financial risks from hidden debt, because it's
easier to rely on borrowing to achieve investment-driven GDP growth than other
methods," Ma said.
Central bank governor Yi Gang has said China's total debt hit about 280% of GDP
at the end of 2020, spiking 20 percentage points from a year earlier - but would
likely stabilise in 2021.
Some local authorities are already raising growth targets for this year.
Hainan, an island province that the central government wants to become a free
trade port to rival Hong Kong, aims for over 10%, up from last year's goal of
around 6.5%. Hubei province, which includes Wuhan, is targeting growth of over
10% this year, while Henan and Hunan provinces have targets above 7%.
Guangdong, the largest provincial economy, is targeting growth above 6%, up from
a goal of around 6% last year.
(Reporting by Kevin Yao; Editing by William Mallard)
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