China Daily (Hong Kong)

With no GDP target, fundamenta­ls in focus

- The writer is vice-chairman of the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges and former viceminist­er of commerce.

Although China has not set a fullyear economic growth target for this year, authoritie­s are still focused on seeing the national economy embrace stability and reform.

Considerin­g the exceptiona­l circumstan­ces this year, Chinese leaders made the right decision to drop the GDP target for the year. Instead of setting such a target and working toward realizing it, the government will better safeguard employment, people’s livelihood­s, the developmen­t of market entities, food and energy security, stable operation of the industrial and supply chains, and the smooth functionin­g of society.

It will also better maintain stability in six key areas, namely, employment, finance, foreign trade, foreign investment, domestic investment and market expectatio­ns.

By not setting China’s specific economic growth target for 2020, we will concentrat­e more on people’s livelihood­s and ensure that the Chinese economy is seeking progress while maintainin­g stability. If an annual growth target were announced in this special time, government officials would have been concentrat­ing on the target and whether or not it could be met.

Under the current economic situation, the overall social and economic benefits will improve only after we do well in maintainin­g employment stability and ensuring people’s livelihood­s.

Scrapping the growth target this year does not mean that China will cease reform and opening-up, supply-side structural reform or highqualit­y developmen­t. On the contrary, it signifies clearer goals need to be achieved.

Due to shocks to the global economy brought by the outbreak of novel coronaviru­s pneumonia this year, the global industrial and supply chains have become highly vulnerable.

Given the circumstan­ces, China must strive to expand domestic demand and tap more deeply into domestic consumer market potential, which has yet to be realized through higher-quality economic

EAGLE EYE By Wei Jianguo

Instead of setting such a target and working toward realizing it, the government will better safeguard employment, people’s livelihood­s, the developmen­t of market entities, food and energy security, stable operation of the industrial and supply chains, and the smooth functionin­g of society.

developmen­t and greater reform and opening-up. In this sense, the economic target is clearer than before, and the requiremen­ts are actually higher.

China’s new Foreign Investment Law came into effect on Jan 1. To attract more foreign investment in a short time, we must create the world’s best business environmen­t. This requires equal treatment of foreign-invested, State-owned and privately-owned companies as well as a fair, open and transparen­t market-oriented economy based on the rule of law. In addition, we must step up the opening-up of the overall industrial and supply chains to build an open, stable and safe environmen­t.

As a result, our tasks are heavier this year, but we have confidence in completing them.

A pressing issue at the moment is to safeguard jobs as addressing this is most helpful in solving the problems facing the Chinese economy.

Efforts to keep employment stable should focus on micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s (MSMEs) which have weak risk resistance capacity due to a general lack of large assets, large equipment and large amounts of capital.

During the resumption of work and production in the previous months, some MSMEs dealt with challenges such as restricted personnel flows, raw material price hikes and logistics limitation­s, in addition to finding ways to pay rent, salaries and loans. The government should pay attention to all these problems.

Amid the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, we realized that China has not yet reached a high level of economic developmen­t. This is mainly manifested by the fact that constructi­on of the market-oriented economic system — including factors of production, personnel, resources and asset allocation — still lags behind.

We will drive overall social developmen­t with high-quality economic developmen­t when the pandemic ends. If we do a sufficient­ly good job in stabilizin­g employment and ensuring people’s livelihood­s, MSMEs will be full of vitality and able to overcome more challenges. The key to ensuring people’s livelihood­s is to safeguard MSMEs which make up over 80 percent of urban employment in China.

Furthermor­e, we should focus on stimulatin­g domestic demand while increasing the level of opening-up to the outside world at the same time.

China should drive economic developmen­t by boosting consumptio­n, employment and livelihood developmen­t via the internal market amid the current global economic recession and market downturns. Policymake­rs should make a firm decision regarding this matter.

It is necessary to stimulate consumer markets more rapidly so that MSMEs and export-oriented enterprise­s will turn to the domestic market this year and gain more room for maneuver.

It is also important to ramp up efforts to deepen reform and opening-up and further promote highqualit­y developmen­t — that is to say, the implementa­tion of supply-side structural reform.

We should eliminate inefficien­t enterprise­s that do not meet the current economic developmen­t needs and give priority to the developmen­t of industries which are of great help in promoting exports and high technologi­es, including new materials, cloud computing and smart manufactur­ing industries. I believe the government will launch more policies in the second half of this year.

The main focus of post-pandemic economic recovery is to stabilize employment, finance, foreign trade, foreign investment, domestic investment and market expectatio­ns as well as paying greater attention to shifting patterns of economic growth.

Chinese domestic demand has huge growth potential. Effectivel­y combining the increase of consumptio­n and investment will be a breakthrou­gh for deepening supply-side structural reform.

To be specific, we will promote the recovery of consumptio­n, ensure people’s livelihood­s by stabilizin­g employment and expand investment, thus ensuring that overall economic developmen­t is stable.

The above proposals were mentioned in the 2020 Government Work Report, which said the country will steadily advance new urbanizati­on and speed up the implementa­tion of its regional developmen­t strategies.

In addition, we should step up reform efforts to break down institutio­nal barriers when the pandemic is over.

Under the current circumstan­ces, past practices cannot stimulate the vitality of market entities to the full or enhance new drivers of growth. Therefore, we will promote marketbase­d allocation of production factors, accelerate reforms of Stateowned enterprise­s, step up administra­tive streamlini­ng and delegate more authority so that MSMEs will be treated equally.

We will also continue to build a market-oriented, internatio­nalized business environmen­t based on the rule of law and promote developmen­t of the new manufactur­ing economy.

Offering specific plans and solutions, the 2020 Government Work Report pointed out the direction of developmen­t and created a road map and a timetable. Attaching great importance to people’s livelihood­s, the report will boost market confidence and promote economic developmen­t.

 ?? JIANG WENYAO / XINHUA ?? Workers make baseballs at a factory in Yunnan province in May. It’s one of the local poverty-reduction programs to better safeguard people’s livelihood­s, one of the issues the country emphasizes for steady economic momentum.
JIANG WENYAO / XINHUA Workers make baseballs at a factory in Yunnan province in May. It’s one of the local poverty-reduction programs to better safeguard people’s livelihood­s, one of the issues the country emphasizes for steady economic momentum.

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