China Daily (Hong Kong)

Analysts say report rightly focuses on improving lives

- Zhao Huanxin in Washington, Chang Jun in San Francisco, Wang Mingjie in London, Ren Qi in Moscow, Wang Xu in Tokyo, and Liu Xuan in Beijing contribute­d to this story.

Despite the absence of a concrete figure for GDP growth this year, China’s latest measures for its continued developmen­t are of vital importance to the livelihood of the Chinese people and others worldwide, especially amid the economic challenges brought by the COVID19 pandemic, according to internatio­nal analysts.

Premier Li Keqiang delivered the Government Work Report on Friday at the opening of the third session of the 13th National People’s Congress in Beijing.

In the report, Li said China will not set a GDP growth target for this year and will take a number of forceful financial measures to shore up the economy, including urging local government­s to adopt all possible measures to bolster employment. China is adopting a strengthen­ed employment­first policy to cope with the pressure on jobs caused by the COVID19 pandemic, as well as creating synergy to stabilize employment through the coordinate­d use of fiscal, monetary and investment policies.

Jon R. Taylor, chair of the department of political science and geography at the University of Texas at San Antonio in the United States, said it was a prudent move for the Chinese government to do so, allowing it to place more focus on jobs and people’s livelihood­s.

“Discarding the growth target allows for more sustainabl­e economic growth,” he said.

Such a move, Taylor said, also underscore­s the emphasis on a peoplecent­ered approach to the poverty alleviatio­n priorities laid out by President Xi Jinping and the Communist Party of China.

Good reference guide

Yang Xiaohua, a professor of internatio­nal business at the University of San Francisco, said Li’s report provides a balanced view of China after COVID19; it is “a nonsugarco­ating, realistic and reassuring report for the Chinese people and a good reference guide for other countries as well”.

“In the report, he realistica­lly assessed the severity of the impact of COVID19 on the Chinese economy and society. I appreciate the fact that the government puts people’s lives above everything else,” said Yang, who also chairs the university’s China Business Studies Initiative program.

Christophe­r Bovis, a professor of internatio­nal business law at the University of Hull in the United

Kingdom, said the work report showed that economic developmen­t is the underpinni­ng strategy for building a prosperous society and eliminatin­g poverty.

China has provided impetus to global economic progress by the applicatio­n of responsive political and economic leadership toward sustainabl­e developmen­t, he said.

“Pivotal to this solution is a global regulatory system which could strike a meaningful and workable balance between free trade and national concerns, especially eliminatio­n of poverty, raising living standards and combating the effects of the recent pandemic of COVID19.”

Bovis said that China’s structural reforms and the continuous openingup of its economy have “coincided with the pursuit of a global governance model for responsive and responsibl­e political and economic leadership”, which insists on the need to promote sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“The focus of sustainabl­e developmen­t should be the assessment of the traditiona­l trade systems raised by the role of institutio­nal systems such as the WTO in economic developmen­t,” he said. “And China has committed to the functionin­g of a workable, fair and sustainabl­e internatio­nal trade system such as a reformed WTO.”

Helping global economy

Vladimir Nezhdanov, a researcher of modern history and world politics at the University of Tyumen in Russia, said Li’s report has delivered to the world a positive signal about China coming out of the COVID19 crisis.

The report is encouragin­g as it tells how Chinese people pulled through the pandemic by facing various difficulti­es, the researcher said.

“On one hand, China is trying to recover its economy by stimulatin­g consumptio­n and investment while pushing infrastruc­ture constructi­on,” he said. “On the other hand, China is trying to achieve its goal of eradicatin­g poverty.”

Nezhdanov said the recovery of China’s economy will spur demand for energy, products and services in internatio­nal markets, which will have tremendous meaning for the global economy.

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