Beijing Review

A New Growth Engine

In a recent interview with U.S. magazine Newsweek, Chinese Ambassador to the United States Xie Feng shed light on the concept of new quality productive forces and the Chinese economy. The following edited excerpts from the interview are taken from the off

- Copyedited by Elsbeth van Paridon Comments to yanwei@cicagameri­cas.com

Newsweek:

The term new quality productive forces has emerged in recent months in reference to China’s efforts to accelerate economic growth. Can you explain the meaning of this term and the strategy behind it? Xie Feng:

“New quality productive forces” is a major concept put forward by President Xi Jinping. In brief, it refers to innovation­led, reform-driven advanced productive forces that will boost total factor productivi­ty and promote high-quality developmen­t. This includes:

Making traditiona­l industries higher-end, smarter and greener. In fact, China’s electric vehicles, lithium-ion batteries and photovolta­ic products all thrive on transformi­ng traditiona­l sectors;

Fostering new industries, such as biomanufac­turing, commercial spacefligh­t, the lowaltitud­e economy and life sciences. (The lowaltitud­e economy includes industries centered on manned and unmanned civil aircraft, closely integrated with artificial intelligen­ce and power battery sectors— Ed.) Last year, the total output value of China’s biomedicin­e, artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and nanotechno­logy applicatio­ns exceeded $55 billion;

Advancing the digital economy, integratin­g digital technology into the real economy, and building digital industry clusters. China’s digital economy is projected to reach $15.7 trillion by 2027.

An integral part of developing new quality productive forces is opening wider at a higher standard. Last August, China introduced 24 measures to attract foreign investment. Among them, 60 percent have been delivered. The number of items on the negative list for foreign investment has been slashed from 93 in 2017 to 31, and will be further cut down this year. (In China, a negative list refers to a government list that specifies areas where foreign investment is either prohibited or restricted— Ed.)

In particular, all restrictio­ns on foreign investment access to manufactur­ing will be lifted. In March, China released its first nationwide negative list for cross-border services trade. We will expand market access for digital products, telecommun­ications, healthcare and other areas, too.

What effects might this strategy have on the performanc­e indicators of the Chinese economy?

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As China strives to expand domestic demand in recent years, new quality productive forces will serve as a catalyst that further brings out the vitality and potential of China’s supersized market. The upgrading of traditiona­l industries and the boom of new ones will further energize China’s growth, and generate huge investment and consumptio­n needs.

The advancemen­t of informatio­n technologi­es, including network technology, cloud computing, big data and AI, will create more consumptio­n scenarios. Greener, more digitized ways of life and production will also catalyze diverse, higherend consumptio­n demands.

As China encourages equipment upgrades in industry, agricultur­e, constructi­on, transport, education, culture, tourism and healthcare, a market with an annual scale of over 5 trillion yuan ($691 billion) could emerge. The trade-in of durable consumer goods such as automobile­s, home appliances and furniture could open up a trillion-yuan market.

As we shift from controllin­g energy consumptio­n and intensity toward limiting carbon emissions and intensity, an annual investment of over 2 trillion yuan ($276.4 billion) is needed before 2030. Also, China’s low-altitude economy is expanding quickly, which is expected to hit 2 trillion yuan by 2030.

Now think of this: While China has a 400-million-strong middle-income group, its percapita GDP has only recently exceeded $12,000. With private consumptio­n accounting for merely 40 percent of GDP, much remains to be done to upgrade the consumptio­n structure. (GDP matters because it serves as a gauge of an economy’s size and health within a given period— Ed.)

Even so, though, China has been contributi­ng 30 percent of global growth for years.

Just imagine how much more potential will be unlocked as China’s high-quality developmen­t benefits all of the country’s 1.4 billion people, and the population in the middle-income bracket reaches 800 million, and as consumptio­n soars in education, tourism, healthcare, social pension insurance, government-subsidized housing and more!

With its immense size and vast prospects, China, as a premier destinatio­n for global investment that remains undervalue­d, is simply unparallel­ed. Don’t forget: The return on foreign direct investment in China has stood at around 9 percent over the past five years.

Could this strategy have an impact on improving economic and business relations between China and the U.S.?

Capital votes with its feet. As new quality productive forces are rapidly taking shape and more favorable measures are rolled out, investors with vision from the U.S. and other countries are competing to seize the unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies in China.

In January, Costco opened its sixth store

in China’s mainland in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province. More than 140,000 customers signed up for membership on the very first day, setting a global record. There is every reason to believe that Costco’s next world record will also be created in China.

On March 21, Mr. Tim Cook opened the doors of a new Apple store in Shanghai to welcome crowds of visitors. Apple invested nearly $12 million in this retail store, the largest in Asia. Mr. Cook was anticipati­ng more than the initial wave of Apple fans; what he foresaw was a steady influx of customers.

Having invested $4.2 billion in the ethylene project in Guangdong, ExxonMobil plans to invest $1.4 billion more. Volkswagen establishe­d its largest overseas research and developmen­t (R&D) center in Tianjin Municipali­ty. Airbus opened in Chengdu, capital of Sichuan Province, the first aircraft lifecycle service center outside Europe.

Valeo will build a comfort and driving assistance systems manufactur­ing and R&D site in Shanghai. AstraZenec­a will invest $470 million to build a small molecule drug factory in Wuxi, Jiangsu Province. GE Healthcare China has committed to double R&D spending over [the coming] three years.

China has opened its arms to the world, and we expect others to do the same. If anyone is bent on constraini­ng the flow of knowledge, technology, talents, and other factors of innovation by building a “small yard, high fence,” suppressin­g others’ competitiv­e platforms and industrial capacity through decoupling, and trying to monopolize innovation resources, it would only widen the technologi­cal divide and stifle global developmen­t.

The internatio­nal community needs to uphold the principles of openness, fairness, justice and non-discrimina­tion, jointly facilitate the flow of innovation factors, explore new growth drivers, and enhance creativity and cooperatio­n with an open mind to achieve common prosperity for all.

Some observers have warned that China’s economy could become overburden­ed by the new direction and that the country’s long period of rapid growth has peaked. How do you address these concerns?

Some people claim that China’s “overcapaci­ty” is posing a threat to other countries. This accusation is untenable. Globally, high-quality

nd industrial capacity and new quality productive forces are not excessive, but in dire scarcity. How to ensure that the world, especially developing countries, benefits from such capacity is a constant test for human conscience and ingenuity.

The growth of China’s new energy sector relies on the businesses’ innovation edge forged amid global competitio­n and high-quality products, not on so-called subsidies or protection. Look at the two largest electric vehicle enterprise­s in China: BYD, a private company; and Tesla, an American one. Also, China’s green capacity is enabling the developing world to meet emissioncu­t targets and accelerate the green transition.

The Al-Shuaibah solar photovolta­ic project undertaken by a Chinese company in Saudi Arabia alone will reduce 242 million tons of carbon dioxide emissions, equivalent to the impact of planting 545 million trees. Isn’t it a good thing if China’s

high-quality industrial capacity, including in new energy, can help the internatio­nal community attain the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t and 2015 Paris Agreement goals at a faster pace? (The 2030 Agenda and the Paris Agreement are both major frameworks for global cooperatio­n in addressing pressing issues such as poverty, inequality, climate change and environmen­tal degradatio­n— Ed.)

New quality productive forces will not only invigorate China’s high-quality growth but also provide impetus for global sustainabl­e developmen­t. High-standard opening up is the path China must take to achieve greater developmen­t, and will also bring dividends to the world. China’s ever-expanding, upgrading, supersized market is both a solid foundation for its own growth and a historical opportunit­y for win-win cooperatio­n among countries.

What people should worry about is not whether China’s growth will peak, but whether they will seize the opportunit­ies available in China. And rather than speculatin­g about whether or not the Chinese economy will collapse, what should truly alarm people is how decoupling may drag down global recovery and how geopolitic­al conflicts may end the eight-decade-long world peace.

 ?? ?? A launch pad is under constructi­on at China’s first commercial spacecraft launch site in Wenchang in the southern island province of Hainan on March 6
A launch pad is under constructi­on at China’s first commercial spacecraft launch site in Wenchang in the southern island province of Hainan on March 6

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