China Daily

China’s solid economy still intact, says NDRC official

- By OUYANG SHIJIA ouyangshij­ia@chinadaily.com.cn

China has the capability, confidence and determinat­ion to continuous­ly promote steady, healthy and sustainabl­e economic developmen­t despite disruption­s from the COVID-19 outbreak, the nation’s top economic regulator said on Friday.

“Though the coronaviru­s outbreak has dealt a huge blow to economic activity, it will only have a temporary and limited economic effect,” said He Lifeng, head of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, on the sidelines of the ongoing two sessions. “The fundamenta­ls of China’s sound economic growth remain unchanged and China has the ability to cope with the various risks and challenges due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.”

Though the coronaviru­s outbreak severely impacted economic activity, the nation is gradually returning to normalcy. In April, the country’s total added value of industrial enterprise­s above a designated size rose by 3.9 percent on a yearly basis, compared with the 1.1 percent decrease in March.

“The considerab­le progress is testimony to China’s remarkable economic resilience, and its ability to withstand the pressure and pain amid the coronaviru­s outbreak,” He said.

Responding to queries on China not setting an economic growth target for this year in the Government Work Report, the NDRC official said most of the indicators are not comparable with the previous year and hence it is difficult to predict the developmen­t pattern, largely due to the coronaviru­s impact.

“In fact, the quantitati­ve economic indicators have been broken into related indicators in fiscal, monetary and other related policies,” He said. “As China’s economy is deeply integrated into the global economy, it is hard to predict the future developmen­t due to uncertaint­ies from the globally spreading coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Under the current circumstan­ces, not setting a specific growth target will allow us to be more focused on key tasks such as expanding domestic demand, ensuring ‘six priorities’ and stability in six areas for steady economic momentum as well as achieving the goal of building a moderately prosperous society in all respects. ”

Tang Jianwei, chief researcher at the Financial Research Center of Bank of Communicat­ions, said China’s decision to not have a fixed GDP growth target has been made after full considerat­ion of the changes to the internal and external environmen­t.

“The negative economic growth in the first quarter and the coronaviru­s’ impact on the global economy will pose great uncertaint­ies to economic developmen­t this year,” said

Tang. “Setting a specific economic target, especially a high growth target, is likely to disrupt the establishe­d tasks of epidemic control and economic and social developmen­t.”

To cushion the coronaviru­s outbreak effect and maintain strong growth momentum, the NDRC said China will speed up new infrastruc­ture constructi­on such as 5G networks, and focus on addressing weak links in fields such as public health, medical emergency supplies and new urbanizati­on.

Hungchih Liu, senior vice-president for Asia-Pacific of US architectu­re and infrastruc­ture consulting company AECOM, said increased investment in new infrastruc­ture will be an important driver of China’s economic developmen­t, and the company looks forward to seeing more discussion­s on the topic during the two sessions meetings.

“We hope that the specific policies and allocation of funds for new infrastruc­ture constructi­on would be implemente­d, along with concrete measures to mobilize social resources and technologi­cal developmen­t of enterprise­s,” said Liu. “Under the current large-scale market impact, we see the uniqueness and advantages of the Chinese system. We think China’s economy will be in a long process of growth and optimizati­on. We will increase investment in the Chinese market in the future.”

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