China Daily (Hong Kong)

Economy the top job for political meetings

- By XIN ZHIMING xingzhimin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Economic topics are expected to dominate the annual national legislativ­e and political consultati­ve sessions in March, with the focus likely to include supply-side reforms, growth prospects, real estate, debts and the yuan’s value.

Uncertaint­y in the global economy also is a likely topic for discussion during the two sessions — the plenary meetings of the National People’s Congress, the top legislatur­e, and the Chinese People’s Polit- ical Consultati­ve Conference National Committee, the top political advisory body.

Economists have remained generally upbeat about China’s economic prospects this year, while some have warned that risks, such as housing bubbles and rising corporate debt, need to be tackled to ensure stable economic growth.

Many economists at home and abroad have raised their forecast for China’s GDP growth this year to above 6.5 percent.

“GDP growth is important, but China will not simply focus on the GDP growth fig- ure itself; instead, it will focus more on sustainabi­lity of growth,” Han Baojiang, an economist from the Party School of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, said on Wednesday. “The Chinese economy will stabilize and gradually improve this year.”

In 2016, China cut low-efficiency capacity in such sectors as steel and coal and lowered overall corporate debt. More progress is expected in 2017.

“This year, supply-side structural reform needs to be deepened,” said Li Wei, head of the State Council’s Developmen­t Research Center on Sunday. “Zombie enterprise­s should be the focus of reducing excessive capacity, and market- and law-based methods should be used to eliminate low-efficiency production.”

Zombie enterprise­s are unprofitab­le and debt-laden but still have access to bank loans and public resources.

Li said corporate debt levels should be lowered this year. Taxes and fees — and especially transactio­n costs — should be cut to benefit the corporate sector, he said, while conceding there is not much room for tax cuts due to fiscal balance pressures.

Adjusting the nation’s real estate inventory is another important part of supply-side reform, and it will hinge on the effectiven­ess of real estate regulation, analysts said.

“The fundamenta­l way to prevent housing prices from soaring is to increase land supply,” said Li Daokui, an economist at Tsinghua University. “What the government can do now is to restrict transactio­ns, but despite the contractio­n of deals, it is difficult to foresee prices in first- and second-tier cities falling.”

If policymake­rs work only on the demand side, analysts warned, prices may continue to rise once policies restrictin­g demand are eased.

Depreciati­on of the yuan relative to the US dollar by nearly 7 percent in 2016 is another area that has caused

concern because of fears the currency may further weaken this year. But analysts said there is no basis for a big depreciati­on of the yuan against the greenback.

“The yuan is largely at a reasonable and balanced level, and it should not depreciate sharply” against the dollar this year, said Lian Ping, chief economist at the Bank of Communicat­ions.

“The key is to change market expectatio­ns through properly adjusting the supply and demand relationsh­ip (of the currency) and economic growth.”

Lian suggested China properly tighten the management of capital outflow. “For example, the policy allowing overseas industrial, property and securities investment should be carried out more cautiously, and speculativ­e foreign exchange purchases should be strictly controlled,” Lian said.

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