China Daily

14th Five- Year Plan’s ambitious goals will upgrade industry, lifestyles

- By David Blair The writer is vice- president and senior economist at the Center for China and Globalizat­ion, a nongovernm­ental think tank based in Beijing. The views don’t necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

China’s 40- plus years of growth has been a wonder. Hundreds of millions of people have been lifted out of poverty and the nation’s lifestyle has been transforme­d.

But this very transforma­tion has led to the need for a new developmen­t model that focuses on upgrading industry and technology and on improving all aspects of people’s lifestyles that are not measured by raw GDP numbers, including improving the environmen­t and ensuring that prosperity is available to all.

The details of the 14 th Five- Year Plan ( 2021- 25) are still being written using a highly collaborat­ive process, but the major emphasis has been made clear by the nation’s leaders. Essentiall­y, it will continue and expand upon goals stated in the 13th Five- Year Plan ( 2016- 20).

The key goal has been the transforma­tion of China’s economic model. It is necessary to focus on building a market- based, efficient and open business environmen­t; to further upgrade the country’s domestic innovation capabiliti­es; to move industry to higher- value added products; to spread common prosperity among more citizens; and to ensure that growth does not come at the cost of environmen­tal degradatio­n.

Not all GDP growth is good for society or beneficial for long- term economic transforma­tion, so China will continue to push toward higher- quality growth. To realize the meaning of “high- quality” growth, we need to compare the economic model that fueled the rapid GDP growth in the first decade of the 2000s, immediatel­y after China joined the World Trade Organizati­on, with the kind of growth the government plans for the 2020s.

In the earlier period, China’s key comparativ­e advantage was in relatively cheap labor combined with acceptable levels of infrastruc­ture and a business environmen­t that was good enough for foreign multinatio­nal corporatio­ns to relocate their manufactur­ing plants.

Much of this industry was highly polluting and paid very low wages. In the year 2000, China was a relatively small player in the world economy, so there was plenty of room in the world market to follow an export- led growth path. This was a necessary transition period since it provided many Chinese entreprene­urs with business experience and allowed the nation to accumulate needed capital.

But, China was not content to be stuck as a low- wage, high- pollution manufactur­ing platform for MNCs. The Chinese government has implemente­d a very long- term transforma­tion plan to sharply raise the quality of the economy and to improve the lives of Chinese people.

Business climate

One critical factor is a long series of market- based reforms that raise economic efficiency by improving the business environmen­t and opening up its domestic markets to world- class competitio­n. This process will be strengthen­ed in the next five years.

China has taken big steps to open its markets to foreign competitio­n and investment. The Foreign Investment Law puts foreign firms on an equal footing with Chinese firms in almost all industries.

Plus, in many sectors, including financial services, automobile­s, and oil and gas exploratio­n, foreign firms are, or soon will be, able to open 100 percent owned companies in China.

For Chinese firms, market- based reforms are paying off. From 2018 to 2019, China jumped from 45th to 31st rank in the World Bank’s “Ease of Doing Business” Index. The report of the index noted China’s “eagerness to reform”.

A key part of the 14th Five- Year Plan is to ensure that these marketbase­d, efficiency- enhancing reforms are speeded up.

Tech transforma­tion

In earlier decades, China could grow by being a technologi­cal follower. That is, it could progress primarily by applying world standard technology within its own economy. Opening up to foreign companies was an important part of the learning process in doing that.

But, China’s economy has now reached the stage where its technology is at, or near, the leading edge. In some areas like e- commerce, digital payments, artificial intelligen­ce, China is already a leader.

Naturally, the country has to concentrat­e on pushing its own technologi­cal capabiliti­es. During the next five years, national research and developmen­t spending will increase further and companies will be encouraged to apply many of the new technologi­es coming online.

This is part of the recently announced dual- circulatio­n developmen­t pattern, which recognizes that China’s domestic consumer market is growing so rapidly that many countries, including China itself, will redirect their efforts to winning some of that market.

China is a very entreprene­urial and competitiv­e market. We have seen that with the right business environmen­t, China’s competitiv­e companies can achieve the highest standards of innovation and efficiency. For example, America’s entrenched technology monopolies have gone to great lengths to ensure that they do not have to compete with Huawei’s phones or WeChat or TikTok.

Superficia­lly, the focus on developing indigenous technologi­cal capabiliti­es may seem to be driven by US moves to limit technology transfers. But, the much more important driver is that China’s economy now has the technology production and research capability and the affluent consumers needed for scientific and technologi­cal advancemen­t.

Common prosperity

It is natural in a period of rapid growth and economic transforma­tion that some people can get rich quicker than others, so China has seen the creation of high levels of wealth and income inequality.

An October 2019 survey by Credit Suisse found that China had 100 million people in the world’s top 10 percent of richest people, surpassing the US for the first time. The survey report concluded that this was made possible by the “rapid transforma­tion of China from an emerging nation in transition to a fully- fledged market economy”.

It should be noted that being in the world’s top 10 percent does not mean that an individual is superwealt­hy since it requires only about $ 110,000 of personal savings. However, people in this category are definitely the foundation of a good consumer market.

Even though the Chinese economy has created prosperity for many, others are still left behind. As Premier Li Keqiang pointed out in a speech in May, 600 million Chinese citizens earn about 1,000 yuan ( about $ 140) per month. So both the 13th and 14 th Five- Year Plans emphasize the need to alleviate poverty and to spread prosperity.

In recent years, the government has especially targeted the eliminatio­n of extreme poverty, which has been prevalent especially in remote agricultur­al villages. In a massive achievemen­t, the goal of raising everyone out of this very dire poverty will be reached before the year- end.

But, the focus over the next five years will be on ensuring that people in near poverty have the opportunit­y to achieve real prosperity and to live a good life.

In an explanator­y speech delivered to the Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee of the Community Party of China, which was convened from Oct 26 to 29 in Beijing, President Xi Jinping emphasized the need to promote common prosperity.

Advancing poverty alleviatio­n has been the top priority for the CPC since its 18th National Congress in 2012, and lifting all rural residents living below the current poverty line out of poverty represents a significan­t step toward common prosperity. It is necessary to further emphasize promoting common prosperity for everyone as China embarks on a journey to fully build a modern socialist country, Xi said.

The proposals called for “more notable and substantia­l progress in promoting common prosperity for everyone”, and “solid efforts to push forward common prosperity”. Such expression­s were included, for the first time, in the documents of the CPC Central Committee plenary sessions, Xi said, adding that the expectatio­ns strike a balance between necessity and feasibilit­y, and will be conducive to advancing common prosperity for everyone.

Green protection

Finally, people cannot live a really good life if the air and water are dirty. The economic growth of the early 2000s was accompanie­d by a lot of environmen­tal degradatio­n.

Speaking at a national conference on environmen­tal protection in May 2018, Xi said that with the Chinese economy transition­ing from highspeed growth to high- quality developmen­t, the building of ecological civilizati­on has entered a critical period — a period that requires more quality ecological goods to meet people’s ever- growing demand for a beautiful environmen­t and at a time when China is capable of addressing prominent environmen­tal issues.

Xi’s recent pledge to the United Nations that China will reach carbon neutrality by 2060 will likely figure prominentl­y in the details of the 14 th Five- Year Plan. Pursuit of carbon neutrality will lead to a move away from coal to clean energy and upgraded industry.

In summary, the 14 th Five- Year Plan will set very ambitious goals that will lead to fundamenta­l upgrading of both industry and the lifestyles of average people.

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