China Daily

Consumer spending gets Cabinet boost

Measures to promote vehicle sales, household purchases and tourism

- By XU WEI xuwei@ chinadaily. com. cn

The State Council, China’s Cabinet, underlined the role of consumer spending as the strongest underpinni­ng for future economic growth as it rolled out a raft of new measures to promote consumptio­n in key sectors and rural areas.

At its executive meeting on Wednesday, the Cabinet pledged to expand consumer spending on vehicles, promote the consumptio­n of home appliances, furniture and home decoration services and extend more support to the catering and tourism sectors.

Key policies include encouragin­g local authoritie­s to adjust policies capping vehicle purchases to make license plates available to residents and offering subsidies to rural residents who buy trucks with a carrying capacity of no more than 3.5 metric tons and passenger cars with engines no bigger than 1.6 liters.

Car owners will receive subsidies if they replace gasoline- powered vehicles that fail to meet national emission standard IV with ones that do, and the constructi­on of parking lots and charging units will be stepped up, the Cabinet said in a statement.

“An important factor that drags on economic growth at present is the fact that consumer spending is still yet to fully recover,” Premier Li Keqiang said at the meeting.

“We are still faced with some difficulti­es to resume the normal growth of consumptio­n, even though there are signs of a rebound in recent months.”

He urged different areas and government department­s to make proactive efforts to foster new bright spots in consumer spending and enable its sustainabl­e recovery.

China’s retail sales, a key barometer of consumptio­n, grew by 4.3 percent year- on- year last month, up from 3.3 percent in September, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

However, they were still down by 5.9 percent in the first 10 months of this year, the bureau said, with output in the catering sector down 21 percent year- on- year amid the fallout from the COVID- 19 pandemic.

Sales of vehicles, including trucks and buses, rose 12.5 percent year- on- year last month, marking the sixth consecutiv­e month of double- digit growth.

However, total purchases in the first 10 months of the year were still below pre- pandemic levels, according to the China Associatio­n of Automobile Manufactur­ers.

Cui Dongshu, secretary- general of the China Passenger Car Associatio­n, said the surge in vehicle purchases in recent months has given strong impetus to growth in consumer spending, and further stimulus policies targeting families without cars will reinforce the momentum.

He said the latest policies rolled out by the State Council target factors that still constrain vehicle sales, such as car license plate restrictio­ns imposed by some local authoritie­s and a sluggish market in rural areas.

In promoting the consumptio­n of home appliances and furniture, the Cabinet said local authoritie­s will be encouraged to offer subsidies to people who trade in old goods and buy smart home appliances and environmen­tally friendly furniture.

To bolster consumptio­n in rural areas, the government pledged to scale up constructi­on of business and trade facilities in counties and townships and build more logistics outlets in villages, adding that law enforcemen­t will be strengthen­ed in rural markets to crack down on fake and substandar­d products.

It is important to make parallel efforts to cater to demand from residents of large and mediumsize­d cities and also those living in counties and rural townships, Li said.

The meeting also adopted a host of measures, including encouragin­g the developmen­t of smart facilities and services such as electronic maps and audio guides at tourist attraction­s, to support Internet Plus tourism.

It vowed to encourage tourist sites to increase online marketing and facilitate new business forms such as virtual tours, adding that regulatory measures will be rolled out for vacation rentals.

Wang Han, chief economist at Industrial Securities, a brokerage, said tourism is the sector that has been hit hardest by the COVID- 19 pandemic, which was an important reason why the Cabinet had come up with steps to shore up the sector’s developmen­t.

“The Cabinet meeting highlighte­d the need to promote Internet Plus tourism, a measure that is in line with normalized COVID containmen­t measures and the interests of young people,” he said.

He said the recovery of consumer spending is still lagging behind other economic growth drivers, such as exports and investment, and that is why the State Council has once again emphasized the need to bolster consumptio­n.

“With consumer spending gradually recovering to a normal level, we also look forward to more policies to improve residents’ income in the 14 th Five- Year Plan,” he said.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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