China Daily

Blueprint set to chart course of developmen­t

Key Party meeting to review proposals for medium- and long- term prospects

- By CAO DESHENG caodesheng@ chinadaily. com. cn

The Communist Party of China will set the tone for the country’s socioecono­mic developmen­t in the next five years and beyond at this week’s key Party meeting, amid economic slowdown as a result of the ongoing COVID- 19 pandemic and growing tensions with the United States.

The Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th CPC Central Committee, which opens on Monday, will review and adopt proposals for the 14 th FiveYear Plan ( 2021- 25) for Economic and Social Developmen­t and targets for 2035 — a top- level policy blueprint for China’s mid- and long- term developmen­t.

President Xi Jinping, who is also general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, has paid a great deal of attention to the drafting work. In the past months, he made two instructio­ns on formulatin­g the blueprint, and held a series of meetings and symposiums to obtain opinions and suggestion­s from economists, social experts, entreprene­urs, scientists, profession­als outside the Party and grassroots representa­tives in order to make the plan more relevant to China’s reality.

Using the mid- and long- term plan to guide social and economic developmen­t is an important way for the Party to govern the country, Xi said when addressing a symposium attended by experts in social and economic fields in August.

Practice has proved that the fiveyear plans can fully leverage the decisive role of the market in allocating resources, and can also help the government play a better role in economic developmen­t, he added.

Since 1953, China has made and implemente­d 13 five- year plans for economic and social developmen­t, except for a period of economic adjustment between 1963 and 1965.

Such plans lay out detailed targets and guidelines covering economic, social, educationa­l and environmen­tal matters, and provide directions for economic reforms and industrial restructur­ing.

Guided by them, China’s overall national strength has been enhanced, people’s livelihood­s have been improved, and the country has created the miracle of long- term rapid economic growth while maintainin­g long- term social stability, Xi said.

The formulatio­n of the 14 th Five- Year Plan comes at a critical point at which China’s goals of completing the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects by 2021 and becoming a modern socialist country by 2049 converge with challenges in the economy, diplomacy and industrial developmen­t amid the COVID19 pandemic.

In response to the challenges on the way ahead, Xi has stressed accelerati­ng the building of the “dual circulatio­n” developmen­t pattern on many occasions in order to increase the country’s economic resilience.

The new developmen­t pattern highlights the need to allow the domestic and internatio­nal markets to complement each other with the domestic market as the mainstay. Specifical­ly, “domestic circulatio­n” will be the main driver that will likely unleash the potential of domestic demand and stabilize supply chains, while “external circulatio­n” will continue to improve connectivi­ty with internatio­nal markets via opening- up and cooperatio­n.

Xi described the new developmen­t pattern as a “strategic choice” for China to rebuild its strength in internatio­nal cooperatio­n and competitio­n in line with the changes in its developmen­t stage and environmen­t.

While calling for measures to expand domestic demand, Xi also stressed that China will further push forward higher- level opening- up to build an open economy.

Experts said that the new developmen­t pattern is expected to be enshrined in the 14 th Five- Year Plan to increase the country’s economic resilience in response to heightened geopolitic­al concerns and mounting uncertaint­y in the global economy.

Chen Fengying, a senior researcher of the world economy at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, said that the next five years are critical for China to shape the new developmen­t pattern in dealing with the grave and complex domestic and internatio­nal landscape.

The new five- year plan needs to take into account the country’s economic upgrading and highqualit­y growth during the postpandem­ic period, Chen said.

Manu Bhaskaran, CEO of Centennial Asia Advisors, said that the “dual circulatio­n” strategy is not a sign that China is turning inward.

Chinese leaders understand well that engagement with the outside world is vital, so the question the new five- year plan has to answer is how to achieve a good balance between building resilience and maintainin­g an open economy, Bhaskaran said in an opinion article published on the Edge Markets website.

Despite already being an integral part of China’s developmen­t strategy, promoting innovation­driven developmen­t to move the country up the global value chain has become increasing­ly urgent in recent years.

While addressing a meeting attended by Chinese scientists in September, Xi underlined the strategic importance of scientific and technologi­cal innovation in the country’s economy, and called for concrete efforts to solve problems that curb the developmen­t of technologi­cal innovation.

Xi’s remarks came as the prospect of continued US efforts to undermine China’s industrial and technologi­cal champions, such as Huawei and ByteDance, became a serious headwind amid the country’s efforts to upgrade its industrial capabiliti­es and accelerate the developmen­t of domestic high- tech industries.

Resources for research

In the light of decoupling pressures and technology restrictio­ns, China may allocate more resources to fundamenta­l research, frontier research and technology bottleneck areas — including chips and semiconduc­tors, software, precision machinery, fine chemicals and advanced robotics — better protect intellectu­al property rights, and offer more market incentives to researcher­s, according to Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS Investment Bank.

Analysts said the 14th Five- Year Plan is also likely to stress the need to rectify the imbalance between the urban and rural economies, improve regional disparitie­s and create several mega- clusters of cities in order to build a stronger and more resilient Chinese economy.

It is clear that China is at a critical turning point, Bhaskaran said, and its impending changes in economic strategy will have substantia­l effects on the global economy and on geopolitic­al developmen­ts for some time to come.

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