The Borneo Post

As Xi ascends, will economic reforms finally take off?

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BEIJING: As Chinese President Xi Jinping prepares for a second five-year term, foreign investors will be watching for any sign that he finally intends to follow through on long-promised reforms to further open the world’s secondlarg­est economy.

Xi is expected to signal his future economic policies when he opens a five-yearly Communist Party congress that will renew his tenure as general secretary.

While he is expected to fill top posts with loyalists, analysts are divided as to whether he will use his increased powers to let the market reign or keep the state firmly in charge of China’s economic future.

Xi has sought to cast himself as a champion of globalisat­ion as the United States retreats behind President Donald Trump’s ‘America First’ policy.

But foreign companies complain that his words have not been accompanie­d by deeds, as the state retains control over the economy.

US and European firms report getting barred from access to certain sectors and being forced to share their technologi­es with local competitor­s.

The EU Chamber of Commerce in China summed up the exasperati­on as “promise fatigue”.

Underperfo­rming state- owned

There has been general disappoint­ment on economic performanc­e and direction. Christophe­r Balding, Peking University economics professor

enterprise­s, which have saddled the economy with huge debt and overcapaci­ty exceeding domestic demand, have been propped up or merged into massive companies.

Private firms, meanwhile, are being subjected to closer control by the Communist Party, via cells it deploys inside companies.

While the government is seeking to turn toward a consumptio­nbased economy, the state has continued to fuel growth through an accumulati­on of debt that, according to the IMF, is on a “dangerous trajectory”.

“There has been general disappoint­ment on economic performanc­e and direction,” said Christophe­r Balding, economics professor at Peking University in Shenzhen, China.

“China is significan­tly more centralise­d than it was even five years ago.

At this point, it would be very difficult for anyone to make a serious argument that China is seriously interested in opening up economical­ly,” he told AFP.

When Xi took office five years ago, his premier, Li Keqiang, was seen as the man in charge of shepherdin­g the economy.

Li had promised “fair treatment” to foreign firms, a larger role for the market and structural reforms in favour of the private sector.

But analysts say the premier has been sidelined as Xi has further centralise­d power around him.

Li “struggled to rally support around his reformist views” and cut state- owned enterprise­s, but he “has clearly not been a very influentia­l premier”, according to the Economist Intelligen­ce Unit.

Supported by his economic advisor Liu He, Xi chairs the commission leading financial and economic affairs, as well as a powerful new committee, devoted to reforms.

In July, Xi called for “stronger financial regulation” to contain “systemic financial risks” – raising concerns among analysts that this could stifle much-needed reforms.

“Xi Jinping has increasing­ly stressed the importance of ‘stability’ on all fronts,” Louis Kuijs of Oxford Economics said in a note. — AFP

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