China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Quality metrics set to transcend GDP goals

- By XIN ZHIMING xinzhiming@chinadaily.com.cn

China will not set a target to double its gross domestic product from 2021 on, and it will put more emphasis on quality of growth, a senior official said on Thursday.

Analysts said the country will deepen its supply-side structural reform, promote employment, increase incomes and strengthen environmen­tal protection to improve the quality of economic developmen­t.

“China’s main social contradict­ion has changed and its economic developmen­t is moving to a stage of high-quality growth from a high-rate of expansion of the GDP,” said Yang Weimin, deputy head of the Office of the Central Leading Group on Financial and Economic Affairs. “The biggest problem facing us now ... is the inadequate quality of developmen­t,” he said at a news conference.

In a speech at the start of the key National Congress of the Communist Party of China on Oct 18, Xi Jinping, CPC Central Committee general secretary, said China would deepen economic reforms as it transition­s from high-speed to highqualit­y growth.

China has put forward a target of doubling its GDP and per capita income in the decade leading up to 2020. Chances are good it will meet that target based on the current rate of growth. Economists estimate an annual GDP growth of 6.3 percent is needed in the coming three years to meet the goal. GDP growth is widely expected to come close to 7 percent this year.

“It is not that we will no longer pursue (high) growth rates,” Yang said. “What we want is ... to make efforts to solve the problem of unbalanced and inadequate developmen­t.”

Analysts said that by prioritizi­ng quality, China is set to deepen structural reforms, promote the job market, raise people’s incomes and enhance environmen­tal protection to try to make growth more sustainabl­e.

“President Xi’s opening speech at the 19th CPC National Congress was notable for the focus placed on quality and equality of developmen­t over the coming years, rather than specific growth targets,” economists at UBS financial services group said in a research note.

The biggest problem facing us now ... is the inadequate quality of developmen­t.”

Yang Weimin, deputy head of the Office of the Central Leading Group on Financial and Economic Affairs

“The supply-side reforms will be deepened and implemente­d further,” said a research note from Nomura financial group.

The UBS economists expected China to implement tougher environmen­tal regulation­s through production cuts and capacity closures this winter and push for faster Stateowned enterprise consolidat­ion and mixed-ownership reform next year.

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