Chinese leaders pledge to tilt stimulus towards consumers
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[July 30, 2024] By
Kevin Yao and Ellen Zhang
BEIJING (Reuters) -Chinese leaders signalled on Tuesday that the
stimulus measures needed to reach this year's economic growth target
will be directed at consumers, deviating from their usual playbook of
pouring funds into infrastructure projects.
The world's second-largest economy missed growth forecasts in the second
quarter and faces deflationary pressures, with retail sales and imports
significantly underperforming industrial output and exports.
The Politburo, a top decision-making body of the ruling Communist Party,
pledged at the end of its July meeting to make "countercyclical
adjustments" during the rest of 2024 to meet an economic growth goal of
roughly 5% for the year.
"The meeting stressed that it is necessary to focus on boosting
consumption to expand domestic demand," the official news agency Xinhua
said.
The Politburo said policies should increase residents' income "through
multiple channels" and enhance the "ability and willingness" of low- and
middle-income groups to spend.
It called for measures to improve welfare for the elderly and children,
and "weave a dense and solid social security net".
As expected, no specific steps were announced, but the leadership
pledged to "timely launch a batch of incremental policy measures".
In referencing incomes and social welfare, it nodded to measures
advocated by some economists who have long argued that China's economic
model relies too heavily on investment and has produced much more debt
than growth in the past 15 years.
They propose Beijing transfers resources from the government sector to
households to address this imbalance, which they say could lead China
towards a decades-long period of low growth and periodic deflation as
seen in Japan.
Analysts said the latest Politburo readout contained more references to
household consumption than previous ones, but this did not necessarily
point to a new top-level agenda for a structural shift to rebalance the
economy.
The meeting's summary still gave prominent space to pursuing "new
productive forces", a term coined by President Xi Jinping last year that
envisions scientific research and technological upgrades for the world's
largest industrial complex.
This suggest Beijing is holding onto its supply-side priorities,
analysts said.
"The meeting did call for policymaking to focus more on household
welfare," Julian Evans-Pritchard, head of China economics at Capital
Economics. "This sounds promising on paper."
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A giant screen shows news footage of Chinese President Xi Jinping
attending the third plenary session of the 20th Central Committee of
the Communist Party of China (CPC), in Beijing, China July 18, 2024.
REUTERS/Tingshu Wang/File Photo
"But the lack of any specifics means it is unclear what it will
entail in practice. And overall, the communique suggests the primary
focus of policy remains on economic security and nurturing new
productive forces in high-end sectors."
Beijing uses the July politburo meeting to recalibrate economic
policies for the rest of the year, not as a forum that discusses
longer-term goals. A different Party meeting on July 15-18, which
takes place roughly twice a decade, pointed to policy continuity,
rather than structural shifts.
The yuan, and Chinese stocks and bonds were little changed following
the announcement.
WEAK DEMAND
After unshackling the economy from three years of COVID-19
restrictions, Chinese officials had hoped that stimulating the
industrial sector would stabilise the job market and lead to higher
wages and consumption.
What happened instead was that greater industrial capacity led to
price wars and a cost-cutting race that kept wages depressed,
fuelling job uncertainty and adding to the pain among consumers
caused by the property sector downturn.
"The government recognises that domestic demand is weak," said
Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.
Authorities have already signalled in recent weeks a shift to a more
supportive policy stance.
China's central bank surprised markets by cutting major interest
rates last week, while the state planner said some funds raised
through this year's ultra-long bond issuance would be shifted
towards supporting a consumer goods trade-in scheme.
On the crisis-hit property sector, the Politburo reiterated existing
policy goals, saying China will continue to support the delivery of
unfinished projects and turn unsold apartments into affordable
housing. It also reaffirmed plans for a "proactive" fiscal policy,
and "prudent" monetary framework.
(Additional reporting by Liangping Gao; Writing by Marius
Zaharia;Editing by Shri Navaratnam, Sharon Singleton and Helen
Popper)
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