The Borneo Post

Security, economy in focus at key China meetings

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China’s top officials hold an annual gathering next week, offering a rare window into the ruling Communist Party’s thinking as it tightens its grip in the face of dire economic headwinds.

From a protracted property crisis to waning domestic spending, China’s lawmakers face a litany of challenges as they hold their ‘Two Sessions’.

The meetings are not expected to see the unveiling of big-ticket bailouts that experts say are needed to get the economy back on track.

Instead, they will continue a path of “elevating national security measures on all fronts”, Ho-fung Hung, a professor of Political Economy at Johns Hopkins University, told AFP.

“It will not help the economy but could help the party-state weather the storm of the economic crisis,” he said.

Smaller-scale investment­s in science and technology, as well as steps to lift China’s debt-battered property market, could be on the agenda.

However, Neil Thomas, an analyst on Chinese politics at the Asia Society, said President Xi Jinping “seems relatively unfazed by his country’s recent growth struggles”.

“I do not expect major shifts on core economic issues,” he told AFP.

Meticulous­ly choreograp­hed and staged over more than a week, the most important of the ‘Two Sessions’ is the National People’s Congress (NPC), China’s legislatur­e, beginning Tuesday in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People.

The Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the first of the sessions, begins on Monday but is generally overshadow­ed by the NPC.

Thousands of delegates from across the country convene for the sessions to approve bills, budgets and personnel moves every year.

First on the agenda will be Premier Li Qiang’s announceme­nt of China’s GDP growth goal for 2024 – broadly expected to remain around five percent.

“The GDP target will likely err on the side of caution without conceding how large the pressures on the economy are,” Diana Choyleva, chief economist at Enodo Economics, told AFP.

Beijing has for years been reluctant to confront those pressures head-on with a major bailout, fearful of putting too much pressure on fragile state coffers.

The NPC serves as a “crucial networking event, where thousands of powerful individual­s from around China meet and discuss politics”, according to analyst Nis Grunberg.

On paper, it wields little actual power.

All major decisions will have been made weeks before in closeddoor meetings of the Communist Party, far from the internatio­nal media’s cameras.

However, the topics that are up for discussion and the tone of the speeches allow for key insights into what’s keeping China’s rulers up at night.

High among those worries are national defence and security. An increase in China’s military budget, which is second only to the United States, is also expected on Tuesday.

Beijing revised a law dramatical­ly expanding its definition of espionage last year and conducted raids on a string of big-name consulting, research and due diligence firms.

The legislatur­e’s top body approved a broad and vaguely worded revision to China’s state secrets law in the run-up to the NPC that was “a clear signal of security’s importance for this year’s governance agenda”, Choyleva of Enodo Economics said.

Given the choice between deep reforms to restart economic growth and efforts to strengthen the state’s power, analysts say China’s policymake­rs have little room for manoeuvre.

“Beijing will not budge on its control and security-first approach,” analyst Grunberg said.

“Everyone should ask themselves: when did Xi last compromise on control in favour of economic growth, let alone liberal reform?”

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Fle photo shows Xi (centre) and other Chinese leaders singing the national anthem during the opening session of the National People’s Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.
— AFP photo Fle photo shows Xi (centre) and other Chinese leaders singing the national anthem during the opening session of the National People’s Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

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