China Daily

5% GDP goal in line with growth plan, expert says

- By ZHENG WANYIN in London zhengwanyi­n@mai.chinadaily­uk.com

China’s aim for a GDP growth of about 5 percent this year is in line with its task to build a modern socialist country through highqualit­y developmen­t, said Michael Dunford, a leading scholar in the field of economic geography from the United Kingdom.

He made the remarks in an interview with China Daily on the latest Government Work Report, which was delivered on March 5 at the opening of the second session of the 14th National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislatur­e.

The report reflects on China’s recent past and outlines plans for 2024, including the GDP target for economic expansion.

“The rates of growth projected for 2024 are not out of order given the enormous size and wealth of China’s domestic market, the completene­ss of its industrial system, and the quality of its workforce. They are more than consistent with China’s long-term goals and are creditable in the context that China itself has chosen in the new era to grow more slowly,” said Dunford, emeritus professor at the University of Sussex and visiting professor at the Institute of Geographic­al Sciences and Natural Resources Research of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

“Instead of high rates of quantitati­ve growth that brought ecological problems, overconcen­tration of unskilled processing industries, and increasing inequality, China has opted for high-quality developmen­t and a distinctiv­e Chinese modernizat­ion path,” he added.

High-quality developmen­t implies “a structural transforma­tion” by moving away from some of the old growth drivers and developing new quality productive forces at a faster pace, which was also proposed in the work report this year, he said.

New quality productive forces refer to advanced productivi­ty that is freed from traditiona­l economic growth mode. They feature hightech, high efficiency and high quality, and they are in line with the new developmen­t philosophy.

Specific plans aimed at accelerati­ng the developmen­t of new quality productive forces in the work report include launching an AI Plus initiative for innovative developmen­t of the digital economy, stepping up efforts to develop hydrogen power, new materials and innovative drugs, and more, Dunford said.

New industrial revolution

“Already in the 14th Five-Year Plan, it was clear that China aimed for supply-side restructur­ing to enable itself to play a leading role in the new industrial revolution by developing new industries and upgrading traditiona­l sectors to become high-end, intelligen­t, and green,” he said.

The 14th Five-Year Plan (202125) is China’s latest medium- and long-term economic and social developmen­t plan, which was approved in 2021.

However, Dunford also said that achieving growth through the high-quality developmen­t path will not be “painless” considerin­g the current internatio­nal conjunctur­e, including the effects of COVID-19, and the increasing geopolitic­al turbulence, among others.

“In choosing the path, China has extremely important assets. In particular, it has the most complete industrial system in the world, but it needs to adjust it,” he said.

For example, Dunford suggested that the skills profile of the graduate and technical workforce must be better matched with the changing profile of the economy, alongside other actions aimed at shortterm employment generation.

Despite some challenges ahead, he expressed confidence in China’s long-term economic prospects and praised the target for being practical. “I think it balances the strategic importance of structural change with managing the difficulti­es encountere­d due to relatively slower growth in the transition era,” he said.

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