Description
China seeks to achieve a GDP growth rate of around 5 percent for 2024, the latest signal that the world's second-largest economy is committed to high-quality development despite uncertainties at home and abroad.
The projected goal, which remains unchanged from the previous year's growth target, is one of the key development objectives unveiled in the government work report delivered by Premier Li Qiang to the national legislature, which began its annual session Tuesday.
But the premier acknowledged that matching that same growth target that the leadership had set a year earlier—when the country was buoyed by optimism after the lifting of three years of Covid-era restrictions—would be an uphill climb.
"Achieving this year's targets will not be easy, so we need to maintain policy focus, work harder, and mobilize the concerted efforts of all sides," Li said.
A pragmatic goal
In general, the growth target of around 5 percent is considered prudent, appropriate and pragmatically positive by public opinion.
To achieve the objectives of the "14th Five-Year Plan" and to double the GDP by 2035 compared to 2020, the compound annual growth rate must be at least 4.7 percent over the next 15 years. Setting a GDP growth target of "around 5 percent" allows for reasonable and moderate progress, sustained momentum, emphasis on quality, stabilization of expectations, and fortification of confidence, experts noted.
This growth target is 0.4 percentage points and 0.5 percentage points higher respectively than the previous expectations of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank for China's economic growth this year, showcasing the economic resilience and potential of the Chinese economy.
The significance of the 5 percent growth target holds a special meaning for the Chinese people too. China's economy is transitioning from a period of high-speed growth to medium-high-speed growth, entering a phase of high-quality development.
While the growth rate may not be as high as before, the optimization of structure, the transformation of driving forces, and the robust development of new quality productive forces provide limitless possibilities for the Chinese economy.
The nation's economy is set for a good start to the new year. China’s foreign trade expanded 8.7 percent year-on-year to 6.61 trillion yuan in the first two months of 2024, official data showed on Thursday.
China is confident that it can sustain the sound fundamentals of foreign trade, with exports climbing the value chain and the import market presenting greater opportunities amid the complex global economic environment and uncertainties, Commerce Minister Wang Wentao said on Wednesday.
Positive signs have emerged as China's foreign trade sector maintained its growth momentum in the first two months of the year, Wang said at a news conference during the annual session of the country's top legislature. Many enterprises are venturing abroad to participate in trade shows and expand their market presence, he added.
Meanwhile, global fund managers have also shown their optimism in China's long-term economic growth.
Outflows from Chinese equities slowed into the end of February and regional active managers started adding growth and tech stocks. They come as China ramps up measures to boostconfidencein its economy, with mainland stockssnappinga six-month streak of foreign outflows.
Northbound capital-overseas capital buying into the A-share market via the stock connect programs linking Shanghai and Shenzhen with Hong Kong-reported a net inflow of over60.74 billion yuan in February.
The figure not only hit the highest monthly value in the past 13 months, but even more than for all of 2023.
Morgan Stanleyrecently reported that a shift away from Chinese equities by global long-term investors has taken a pause, with some funds getting less bearish.The China equity strategy team of Goldman Sachs Research Department also pointed out in a recent repo