Chattanooga Times Free Press

World still awaits China’s economic reforms

- BY CHRIS BUCKLEY AND KEITH BRADSHER

BEIJING — For years, China’s president, Xi Jinping, has talked the talk of economic reform. In January, he dazzled business executives in Davos, Switzerlan­d, with a defense of internatio­nal trade. Last month, he urged officials to “seize hold of reform and make it an even bigger priority.” And the annual meeting of China’s legislatur­e, starting today, appears sure to echo that theme.

But as Xi nears the end of his first five-year term as Communist Party leader, his record has not lived up to the bold statements, critics say.

The question now is whether he was ever really serious about taking the painful steps needed to repair the economy, or merely paying lip service to reform to justify his tightening grip on power.

Xi’s defenders argue he had to consolidat­e his authority first, before he could make the potentiall­y wrenching decisions needed to open markets and trim bloated state-owned industries. With weak growth in the rest of the world and demand for China’s exports flagging, they contend, there was little margin for error and caution was warranted.

The proof will be in the second term, they say, when Xi finally has the power to push through difficult economic adjustment­s.

Xi is already China’s most powerful leader in decades. He has repeatedly used his authority, though, to undercut reforms he says are necessary, ordering heavy-handed interventi­on in the stock market, for example, and restrictio­ns on the movement of money abroad and property prices.

The problem, critics say, is that Xi’s demands for centralize­d control, stability and political conformity have often drowned out hesitant steps toward economic liberaliza­tion. And his second term is likely to bring more of the same, they say.

“I’m highly skeptical, since I don’t think it’s a lack of authority or the opposition of special interests that have kept him from moving in that direction so far,” said Scott Kennedy, director of the Project on Chinese Business and Political Economy at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies in Washington. “Rather, he’s operated according to his instincts in the face of economic challenges. And I don’t expect his instincts or those challenges to change much.”

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