China Daily (Hong Kong)

Xi emphasizes crucial role of consumptio­n

‘Dual-circulatio­n’ developmen­t strategy called answer to challenges, uncertaint­ies

- By LIU ZHIHUA and OUYANG SHIJIA

Editor’s note: The Fifth Plenary Session of the 19 th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, which concluded last week, proposed major social and economic developmen­t targets for the 14 th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) period. China Daily will run a series of stories about the plan. This story is about China’s efforts to further expand the domestic market and foster a new developmen­t pattern.

China must firmly adhere to the strategy of further fueling domestic consumptio­n growth, because the stronger the domestic market is, the more viable “dual-circulatio­n” developmen­t will be and the greater contributi­on the Chinese economy will make to the world, according to the country’s top leadership and analysts.

President Xi Jinping has called for expanding domestic consumptio­n so that all links including production, distributi­on, logistics and consumptio­n can rely more on the domestic market to sustain a positive growth cycle, according to an article published in the latest issue of Qiushi Journal, the flagship magazine of the Communist Party of China Central Committee.

A concept first put forward in May, the dual-circulatio­n developmen­t pattern is defined as “taking the domestic market as the mainstay while the domestic and internatio­nal markets complement each other”.

With a population of 1.4 billion, and per capita GDP exceeding $10,000, China has become the world’s most populous consumer market with unparallel­ed potential.

Together with modern technology and manufactur­ing, domestic consumptio­n upgrading has huge growth potential, he said in the article.

Xi also stressed that expanding domestic demand and opening-up do not contradict each other.

The stronger the domestic market, the more attractive China can be for foreign investors. That will help build the dual-circulatio­n developmen­t pattern, taking the domestic market as the mainstay while the domestic and internatio­nal markets boost each other, he said.

The communique of the Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee of the CPC, released on Oct 29, said the country will integrate the strategies of expanding domestic demand and deepening supply-side structural reforms, to create and promote new demand through innovation-driven, highqualit­y supplies.

The country will stimulate the domestic market and let the domestic and internatio­nal markets reinforce each other, spurring consumptio­n in an all-around way and expanding investment, the communique said.

Stimulatin­g the domestic market is the key for the domestic and internatio­nal markets to reinforce each other, while spurring consumptio­n is the key to stimulatin­g the domestic market, according to experts.

Analysts said the dual-circulatio­n developmen­t strategy mentioned in the developmen­t objectives proposed for the 14 th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) period is the country’s latest answer to deal with internal challenges and external uncertaint­ies.

They said that after the 2008 global financial crisis, China had already put forward the strategy of domestic market expansion, and the new strategy, emphasizin­g the domestic market, is a strategic decision to transform challenges and a crisis into opportunit­ies securing high-quality developmen­t under new circumstan­ces.

Consumer spending

Official data showed that China’s consumer spending already contribute­d 57.8 percent to GDP growth in 2019, as the country’s consumer scale and supply capacity continuous­ly expanded.

Liu Yuanchun, vice-president of Renmin University of China, said that China has the industrial and market foundation­s to realize the dual-circulatio­n developmen­t strategy, and to build a secure and resilient economic system, the country needs to focus on the domestic market.

“The domestic market is the key to the overall improvemen­t of China’s competitiv­eness, moving up the value chain and building a secure and efficient economic system,” he said.

According to a recent report from the National Institute of Finance and Developmen­t, household consumptio­n makes a relatively low contributi­on to China’s GDP, which is associated with the low share of the service sector in the Chinese economy, and also because people’s disposable incomes are insufficie­nt to support strong spending.

In 2018, China’s household consumptio­n accounted for only 39 percent of GDP, 20 percentage points lower than the global average level, according to the report.

In the same year, investment contribute­d to 43 percent of China’s GDP, 19 percentage points higher than the global average and 22 percentage points higher than that of developed countries.

Commenting on China’s developmen­t objectives for the upcoming 14th Five-Year Plan period, Cao Yuanzheng, chairman of BOCI Research Co Ltd, said the success of the dualcircul­ation developmen­t pattern depends on the growth of people’s incomes, especially that of the low and lower-middle income groups.

Chinese people’s incomes have exponentia­lly increased over the past 40 years, but the income growth of the low and lower-middle income groups mostly relies on earnings related to job opportunit­ies during industrial­ization and urbanizati­on, he said.

As China’s current urbanizati­on rate is about 61 percent, lagging behind the 75 to 80 percent in developed countries, the income growth potential is huge, yet about one-third of China’s city dwellers are migrant workers, who work in cities but spend a limited amount of their income there, he said.

He suggested increasing migrant workers’ disposable incomes to tap their spending power through measures such as new urbanizati­on and reform of the rural land system.

The dual-circulatio­n developmen­t strategy, centering on the domestic market, is also part of China’s efforts to optimize and stabilize the industrial and supply chains amid economic transforma­tion and upgrading, experts said.

The China Macroecono­my Forum said in a recent report that China needs to move up the global industrial chain and foster new growth drivers.

Jiang Xiaojuan, head of the School of Public Policy and Management at Tsinghua University, said, “Under the new developmen­t pattern, we need to make a big push to deepen supply-side structural reforms, develop a modern economic system, improve resource allocation efficiency and increase overall productivi­ty, in order to continuous­ly expand domestic economic circulatio­n.”

More efforts are needed to accelerate the process of urbanizati­on, spur domestic consumptio­n, level the playing field, speed up i ndustrial developmen­t and further strengthen the industrial and value chains, she said.

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