China's Xi solidified grip on power during tumultuous 2022
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[December 29, 2022]
By Tony Munroe
BEIJING (Reuters) - Xi Jinping secured an historic third leadership term
in October, emerging as China's most powerful ruler since Mao Zedong,
bolstered by a Politburo Standing Committee stacked with allies and no
successor-in-waiting to challenge him.
It was a rare highlight for Xi in 2022, a tumultuous year capped by
unprecedented street protests followed by the sudden reversal of his
zero-COVID policy and coronavirus infections rampaging across the
world's most populous country.
While frustration over zero-COVID and its devastating impact on the
second-largest economy did little to disrupt Xi's march towards five
more years as general secretary of the ruling Communist Party, 2022 was
a year of crises at home and abroad for the 69-year-old leader.
China's economy is on track to grow at around 3% in 2022, far short of
its official target of roughly 5.5%, as the country's outlier COVID
curbs stifled consumption and disrupted supply chains, while crisis in
its massive property sector continued to weigh.
Beijing's relations with the West deteriorated, worsened by Xi's "no
limits" partnership with Moscow struck just ahead of Russia's invasion
of Ukraine in February, as well as growing tensions over U.S.-backed
Taiwan, which China considers part of its territory.
Xi travelled abroad for the first since the start of the pandemic,
meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in September. In November,
he met U.S. President Joe Biden at the G20 in Indonesia as both sides
sought to steady relations.
Later that month, protesters in cities across China took to the streets
in opposition to nearly three years of stifling COVID-19 controls that
were a signature Xi policy. Such widespread protests were the first in
China since 1989.
In an unexpectedly sudden reversal, China in early December dropped most
of its COVID controls as cases in cities including Beijing surged,
despite warnings from global experts over insufficient vaccine coverage
and a health system unprepared to cope with an explosion of infections.
WHY IT MATTERS
For decades, China has been the world's primary economic growth engine
as well as the linchpin in industrial supply chains. A prolonged
economic slowdown or fresh logistical disruptions, whether due to COVID
or geopolitical tensions, would reverberate globally.
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U.S. President Joe Biden meets with
Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the G20 leaders'
summit in Bali, Indonesia, November 14, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File
Photo
Xi further consolidated his power in a process that began when he
first took office a decade ago, a concentration that has taken China
in a more authoritarian direction and that critics warn raises the
risk for policy missteps.
Immediately after October's Communist Party congress, global
investors dumped Chinese assets and the yuan currency tumbled to its
weakest in nearly 15 years on fears that security and ideology would
increasingly trump growth and international detente during a third
Xi term.
WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR 2023?
Since the congress, China has reversed zero-COVID and said it will
focus on stabilising its $17 trillion economy in 2023.
Management of mushrooming infections across a vast population with
little "herd immunity" is Xi's most pressing challenge, with
implications for public health as well as social stability and the
economy.
Experts warn that China, home to 1.4 billion people, could see more
than 1 million COVID-related deaths in the coming year.
At its annual parliamentary gathering in March, China will complete
its leadership transition, with Shanghai party chief Li Qiang, a
close Xi ally, poised to replace the retiring Li Keqiang as premier,
a role charged with managing the economy.
The World Bank expects reopening of China's economy will lift growth
to 4.3% in 2023 from its forecast of 2.7% for the current year.
Diplomatically, Xi appears to be trying to cool some of the tension
that has made relations with the West increasingly fraught, even as
Beijing tries to shore up its position as a counterweight to the
U.S.-led post-World War Two order, with outreach such as Xi's recent
visit to Saudi Arabia.
Explore the Reuters' round-up of news stories that dominated the
year, and the outlook for 2023
(Reporting by Tony Munroe; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
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