China Daily

New stimulus package to ease COVID-19 woes

Expected policy to center on boosting consumptio­n, strengthen­ing demand

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China is likely to come up with a fiscal stimulus package during the upcoming annual meeting of the country’s top legislatur­e, including raising fiscal deficit and expanding government debt, to contain the economic impact of COVID-19 epidemic and accelerate recovery, according to officials and experts.

The government will moderately raise the fiscal deficit ratio, issue special Treasury bonds to counter the COVID-19 impact, increase local government special bonds and continuall­y implement tax and fee cuts, to proactivel­y offset the economic downturn, Finance Minister Liu Kun said on Thursday.

An increase in the fiscal deficit will release positive signals and stabilize market confidence, and help ease the government financing difficulti­es as the budgeted income for this year is projected to be lower than last year, Liu said in a statement on the ministry website.

The issuance of special Treasury and more local government special bonds will expand government-led investment, promote consumptio­n and strengthen domestic demand, he said.

Liu stressed that the fiscal policy will be more proactive, to maintain economic fundamenta­ls focusing on “six priorities”: safeguardi­ng employment, people’s livelihood­s, the developmen­t of market entities, food and energy security, the stable operation of industrial and supply chains, and the smooth functionin­g of society.

These economic targets were listed for the first time at a meeting of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee on April 17, chaired by Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee.

To implement the fiscal measures, the minister said tax relief measures would be added especially for small and medium-sized enterprise­s hit by the virus, including maintainin­g lower value-added tax rates and corporate pension rates. Also in the cards is an increase in the unemployme­nt relief.

According to political advisers, the central government will disclose the size and usages of COVID19 special Treasury bonds and the full-year quota for local government special bonds — the two major instrument­s to increase government spending, during the upcoming annual meeting of the third plenary session of the 13th National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislatur­e.

Liu Shangxi, a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference and head of the Chinese Academy of Fiscal Sciences under the Ministry of Finance, said: “Expanding public consumptio­n is one of the major goals of fiscal policy to offset the COVID-19 shocks.” In face of the unpreceden­ted challenges, fiscal stimulus should be used to control risks, different from the traditiona­l role of expanding demand through increasing investment.

Some economists expressed concern that higher bond issuances, especially the local government special bonds to fund infrastruc­ture projects, and weaker revenue due to further tax cuts and fee exemptions, may weaken local government fiscal positions and further increase their debt burden and contingent liabilitie­s.

“To date, direct fiscal measures from the Chinese central government have been moderate and deployed with higher reliance on monetary easing,” said Michael Taylor, managing director of the Asia Pacific region at global credit ratings agency Moody’s.

China’s direct fiscal support differs from that of the major developed economies which includes, besides spending on healthcare and tax relief, large spending on job retention schemes and unemployme­nt insurance, as well as direct cash payments, according to Moody’s.

“Rather than housing and traditiona­l infrastruc­ture projects adopted in response to the global financial crisis, the target of public investment in infrastruc­ture will be for projects such as telecommun­ication networks, healthcare services and facilities that promote sustainabi­lity and productivi­ty,” said Taylor.

“The funding mechanism has also shifted from government-backed bank lending to bond financing, especially for local government special bonds, which are more transparen­t,” he said.

Expanding public consumptio­n is one of the major goals of fiscal policy to offset the COVID-19 shocks.”

Liu Shangxi, a member of the National Committee of CPPCC and head of the Chinese Academy of Fiscal Sciences under the Ministry of Finance

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