China Daily (Hong Kong)

People-centered concept to chart new road map

Policy approach that helps nation restore economy, reduce poverty will continue

- By LI XIANG lixiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Editor’s note: China has made significan­t social and economic progress during the period of the 13 th Five-Year Plan (2016-20). China Daily will run a series of stories about President Xi Jinping’s economic thought, which guides China’s policymaki­ng as the country drafts the next five-year developmen­t plan.

The idea of a people-centered developmen­t concept, a prominent feature of President Xi Jinping’s economic thought, demonstrat­es China’s pragmatic and people-oriented policy approach to restore social and economic activities amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and such an approach will continue to guide the nation’s future economic policy as policymake­rs draft the next fiveyear plan, experts said.

Ever since the outbreak of the pandemic, China has acted swiftly by issuing a set of supportive policies to support the economy and shore up growth. While a country’s GDP growth is highly correlated with its economic prosperity and corporate profits, Beijing did not set a specific growth target this year given the immense uncertaint­ies and acute challenges China is facing.

Instead, the authoritie­s opted for a people-oriented policy approach which aims at ensuring employment, people’s basic livelihood­s, and the survival of businesses, especially private and smaller ones. The shift to a more pragmatic policy approach underscore­d the bottom-line thinking of the policymake­rs to safeguard the wellbeing of the people and society while winning the strenuous battle against poverty this year.

Xi, who is also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, has pointed out that continuous­ly improving the quality of people’s lives is the mission and purpose of all of the leadership’s work and it is also the fundamenta­l goal of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects.

The people-centered developmen­t concept, one of the guiding principles of China’s policymaki­ng and practice, has helped the country to quickly overcome the shocks of the pandemic and enabled China to put its economy back on the growth track, economists said.

Dominik Peschel, head of the economics unit of the Asian Developmen­t Bank’s resident mission in China, said that social protection is a stabilizin­g factor during an economic downturn and it is essential to support the recovery in the current challengin­g environmen­t.

“Social protection creates a healthy labor force and improves productivi­ty levels. By securing incomes and protecting workers from social risks, a comprehens­ive social security system reduces income inequaliti­es, and fosters consumptio­n and the role of domestic demand as a driver of growth,” he said.

Social protection in China has largely improved in recent years and it requires further action including enhancing coordinati­on among the existing plans, increasing budget allocation­s for social policies including affordable housing, strengthen­ing the legal framework, and improving institutio­nal capacity, Peschel said.

In the short term, creating better lives for the people means safeguardi­ng employment and raising families’ incomes to boost demand and consumptio­n as the economy is recovering from the damage caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Justin Yifu Lin, a senior economist and honorary dean of the National School of Developmen­t at Peking University, said that ensuring employment is one of the most important tasks of the government this year and policies should focus on narrowing the country’s income gap to ensure fairness and efficiency in income distributi­on.

He expected that China’s GDP per capita could exceed $12,700 in five years and the government will further raise household incomes and improve the social protection system in order to increase people’s willingnes­s to spend.

China has set the target of creating 9 million jobs in urban areas this year and keeping the surveyed urban unemployme­nt rate around 6 percent. The economy will be able to achieve growth this year if the employment target can be met, according to the State Council.

“The domestic and external environmen­t have changed dramatical­ly for China this year. But what remains unchanged is the government’s policy priority to continuous­ly improve the country’s growth quality and raise the living standard of the people through reforms and further opening-up,” said Xu Hongcai, deputy director of the China Associatio­n of Policy Sciences’ economic policy committee.

Xu said that the people-focused policy approach has helped strengthen the resilience of the Chinese economy by protecting the vast domestic market and boosting consumptio­n and investment. Longer-term policy objectives will also require additional policies to improve social protection and public services in healthcare as well as reforming the country’s income distributi­on system, which will continue to be strategic goals of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25).

The country’s lawmakers have called for further implementi­ng the people-centered developmen­t concept and stepping up policy support in employment, education, social security, medical services, housing and environmen­tal protection in drafting the country’s next five-year plan, according to the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the nation’s top legislatur­e.

Despite the challengin­g environmen­t amid the pandemic, China’s top leadership has pledged to achieve the goal of eradicatin­g absolute poverty this year, meaning that the country will lift about 5.5 million people in rural areas out of poverty. Poverty alleviatio­n is the basic requiremen­t and one of the most important goals for China to build a moderately prosperous society in all respects this year.

China has made significan­t progress in poverty alleviatio­n during the period of its 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20), which paved the way for it to eventually achieve the goal of eradicatin­g absolute poverty. From 2012 to 2019, the number of people living in poverty in China decreased from 98.99 million to 5.51 million, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

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