Business Day

China’s 5% growth target ‘achievable’

- Kevin Yao and Albee Zhang

The head of China ’ s state planner says the government’s 5% economic growth target for 2024, which many analysts say is ambitious, is achievable and he expects the world’s secondlarg­est economy to have a good first quarter.

Speaking at a briefing on the sidelines of the annual parliament meeting in Beijing, Zheng Shanjie said officials would step up policy adjustment­s in 2024 to consolidat­e a recovery.

“The target is in line with the annual requiremen­ts of the 14th five-year plan and matches the potential for economic growth, making it a positive and achievable target,” Zheng, chair of the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said.

Premier Li Qiang on Tuesday announced the growth goal of 5% in his maiden work report to the National People’s Congress and promised to transform the country’s developmen­t model to offset the drag from a prolonged property crisis, high local government debts and weak consumer demand.

But analysts say much more stimulus may be needed to hit this year’s target and Li’s vision contains an inherent contradict­ion: his aim to “transform” the economic model may be incompatib­le with keeping growth rates steady.

“The drag from the unavoidabl­e structural decline in China’s property sector has only just begun,” Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics, said in a note to clients, while warning that weak demand in the constructi­on sector “would shave another percentage point off China’s average economic growth rate over the rest of this decade”.

China’s disappoint­ing postCovid recovery has cast doubts about the foundation­s of its investment-heavy economic model, raising the stakes for government action at the weeklong parliament meeting of senior policymake­rs.

China’s manufactur­ing activity in February shrank for a fifth straight month, an official survey showed, though the services sector showed modest signs of improvemen­t.

“Comprehens­ive analysis shows that the economy can be expected to have a good first quarter,” Zheng said, referring to February manufactur­ing and services sector data. He said that China’s exports for JanuaryFeb­ruary increased by 10%, but did not state whether that was in yuan or US dollar terms.

Economists recently polled by Reuters expected outbound shipments in the first two months grew just 1.9% year on year. The trade data will be released on Thursday.

China’s foreign trade faced a severe situation in 2024, commerce minister Wang Wentao told the briefing.

Pan Gongsheng, governor of the People’s Bank of China, said the bank would keep the yuan basically stable and that it had “rich monetary policy tools at its disposal”.

Pan added there was still room for cutting banks’ reserve ratio requiremen­t, after a 50basis points cut in January, which was the biggest in two years.

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