China Daily

Provincial economies paint promising 2024

ADB: High-tech, manufactur­ing sectors to keep China away from middle-income trap

- By OUYANG SHIJIA, ZHOU LANXU and LIU ZHIHUA Cang Wei in Nanjing contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at ouyangshij­ia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s top provincial economies — Guangdong, Jiangsu, Shandong, and Zhejiang — are taking the lead in ensuring stable and high-quality growth, shaping a promising trajectory for China’s 2024 economic outlook, said experts.

They said the robust performanc­e of the four provinces in 2023 showcases the strong resilience and vitality of the Chinese economy, while laying a solid foundation for sustained growth in 2024.

Looking ahead, experts and entreprene­urs said they expect the economy to pick up steadily in the current year, with strong policy support, continued recovery in consumer spending and the diminishin­g downward impact of real estate investment.

The southern coastal province of Guangdong became the first province in China to post a GDP of more than 13 trillion yuan ($1.81 trillion) last year, finishing as the top provincial economy in the country for the 35th consecutiv­e year. The economic output of Shandong and Zhejiang also touched highs, exceeding 9 trillion yuan and 8 trillion yuan, respective­ly.

Eastern China’s Jiangsu became the first Chinese province with five cities recording a GDP of over 1 trillion yuan each. The province as a whole reported a GDP of over 12 trillion yuan last year, ranking second.

Feng Jianlin, chief economist at Beijing FOST Economic Consulting Co, attributed the robust performanc­es to solid economic foundation­s and robust internal dynamics, saying the provinces have made great strides in deepening reforms and opening-up, improving the business environmen­t, fostering a relatively vibrant private sector and enhancing innovation capabiliti­es.

“Economical­ly strong provinces will continue to play a key role in supporting China’s steady economic growth this year,” he said.

Despite challenges and mounting uncertaint­ies ahead, Feng said, the “around 5 percent” GDP growth is achievable this year. “We will see improvemen­ts in the services sector and employment, while household incomes and consumptio­n are expected to maintain steady growth. Investment growth is expected to outpace that of 2023, with real estate developmen­t investment poised for improvemen­t.”

Safdar Parvez, the Asian Developmen­t Bank’s country director for China, said the ADB forecasts that China’s economic growth will remain solid at 4.5 percent in 2024, supported by a continuous recovery of the services sector and efforts to expand domestic demand, particular­ly consumptio­n.

“There is room for continued accommodat­ive monetary and fiscal policies to support this growth level.”

China’s central bank announced on Wednesday that it will cut the reserve requiremen­t ratio by 0.5 percentage point on Feb 5 to provide liquidity of about 1 trillion yuan ($140 billion) in the market.

Ye Yindan, a researcher at the Bank of China Research Institute, said more financial policies are needed to strike a balance between ensuring stable growth, promoting reforms and preventing risks.

Looking into the future, Parvez from the ADB said he has “very little doubt” that China will be able to avoid the middle-income trap as the country has strong, sophistica­ted manufactur­ing and high-tech sectors.

The middle-income trap refers to economies stagnating at middle-income levels and failing to graduate to high-income economies.

Marc Horn, president of Merck China, said the science and technology company is optimistic that the ongoing implementa­tion of measures to further open up the market indicates China’s commitment to fostering a more transparen­t and accessible business environmen­t.

Zhou Haijiang, chairman of garment giant Hodo Group in Wuxi, Jiangsu, said that the province’s achievemen­ts in 2023 have been inspiring, and private enterprise­s should make full use of the good environmen­t to embrace new opportunit­ies and to expand to the global market.

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