Chinese policymakers will likely adopt a more pro-growth stance and strengthen “extraordinary countercyclical measures” to spur the economy amid pressing challenges from sluggish domestic demand and external uncertainties, economists said.
They anticipate a new round of stimulus packages focusing on driving domestic demand and boosting consumption to address domestic structural issues, offset the rising headwinds from a grimmer global environment, and foster sustainable, high-quality growth in the long run.
The economists said they believe the measures in the pipeline may include more public borrowing and spending, with a growing shift of policy emphasis to consumption, enhanced financial support for low-income households, and increased spending on the property sector through repurchases of land from developers or by helping the developers finish presold homes.
Their comments came as the market is closely watching how China will draw up growth targets and policies to revive the world’s second-largest economy when China’s top legislative and political advisory bodies meet for the annual “two sessions” in early March.
Noting that the broader economy is still facing pressures from a harsher external environment and still-weak domestic demand, Sun Xuegong, director of the department of policy study and consultation at the Chinese Academy of Macroeconomic Research, said policymakers will likely introduce a package of stimulus measures aimed at boosting market confidence and stabilizing expectations. The academy is part of the National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s top economic regulator.
As authorities pledged to implement extraordinary countercyclical policies this year, Sun highlighted the need to expand fiscal expenditure, with policy focus shifting to spurring consumption.
“We need a comprehensive policy mix to boost consumption,” Sun said in an interview with China Daily. “The government has already announced raising the pension level and providing subsidies to the low-income group. And this year, the country will extend the program of trade-in deals for consumer goods and expand the scope to more fields of consumption.”
With a series of existing policies taking effect gradually and more supportive measures in the pipeline, Sun said he expects to see a pickup in consumption.
At a study session held last week by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, Premier Li Qiang emphasized boosting consumption and improving people’s livelihoods through stronger and more targeted measures, in a bid to strengthen the fundamental role of consumption in driving economic development.
Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS Investment Bank, said her team expects the government to ramp up fiscal spending to support consumption and the household sector, including more than doubling the size of the trade-in program to over 300 billion yuan ($41.3 billion), creating a subsidy program for families with young children, and increasing the payout level of residents’ basic pension and the government contribution to basic social insurance.
“These much-anticipated measures could gradually help underpin household confidence and unleash consumption potential in the long run,” Wang said.
On the monetary front, Wang said she anticipates that the two sessions will follow the “moderately loose” monetary policy tone set during the Central Economic Work Conference in December.
Tian Xuan, associate dean of Tsinghua University’s PBC School of Finance, said the economic growth target for this year will likely stay at “around 5 percent”, the same as last year, reflecting the continuity and consistency of policies and aligning with the country’s aspiration that the per capita GDP should reach the level of a moderately developed economy by 2035.
Contact the writers at ouyangshijia@chinadaily.com.cn