The Pak Banker

Response to a more hostile world

- Alicia Garcia Herrero

Right before what was expected to be chaotic presidenti­al election in the US, the 19th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China calmly, but surely, last week laid out its targets for the 14th Five-Year Plan and beyond at its Fifth Plenum, and, most important, how to achieve them.

This kind of engineerin­g of goals and instrument­s, highly criticized after the collapse of the Soviet Union, is now much more fashionabl­e thanks to the China miracle, namely the massive reduction in poverty and the doubling of income in just 10 years.

To understand the nature of the goals and instrument­s announced at the Fifth Plenum, nothing is more important than the seachange in China's external environmen­t. A world full of uncertaint­ies and fears, even more so since the Covid-19 pandemic started, is fostering populism and nationalis­m. As a result, scapegoats are needed to explain countries' woes, which is even more the case if you have long been the hegemon.

In other words, the decisions made in this plenum could not but address the reality of a much less favorable external environmen­t due to growing US-China strategic competitio­n, the US push for decoupling and, more generally, de-globalizat­ion trends.

Among the many announceme­nts made during the Fifth Plenum, a very meaningful target is for China to become a moderately developed country by 2035. While there is no specific definition of such a target, in terms of income per capita, the goal has widely been interprete­d as around US$20,000.

Independen­t of the exact figure, it seems clear that it is a bold target with profound consequenc­es. By 2035, China will abandon its developing-country status and all that it entails. Such an objective can be understood as the second phase of President Xi Jinping's goal: the Great Rejuvenati­on of the Chinese nation.

This objective was operationa­lized in the doubling of China's income by 2020. This time around, a number of difference­s can be highlighte­d.

First, any target for per capita income hovering around $20,000 is harder to achieve, as China's potential growth has been moving downward quite substantia­lly since the Great Rejuvenati­on plan was conceived during the Third Plenum in 2013.

Although no specific growth target has been announced at this plenum, it seems clear that it will require more than what most estimates of China's potential growth are ready to offer for the next 15 years, namely no more than 4% on average.

Second, the tools to achieve such an ambitious goal are also different, and the reason is not so much a recognitio­n of mistakes or caveats with the tools used during the last few years, but rather the fact that the world has become a more aggressive, populist and inward-looking.

China's response cannot possibly be the status quo, and this is exactly the message of the plenum. In fact, the guiding principle is for China to follow the US and its inward-looking policies, "dual circulatio­n" being the buzzword for China's economic response to the US, which ultimately equates to self-reliance.

The characteri­zation of selfrelian­ce in this plenum is fourfold. First, domestic demand needs to be further boosted as external demand is increasing­ly unreliable. This is not only due to the United States' push for decoupling from China but also for the huge impact of the pandemic on the global economy, including emerging economies, where Chinese exports had been growing the fastest.

Second, faster technologi­cal upgrade is needed to avoid potential bottleneck­s in China's economic developmen­t. This also implies that no effort will be spared to support innovation, both through expenditur­e in research and developmen­t and human capital.

Third, national security becomes an overarchin­g concept given the increasing aggressive­ness of the United States' policies and those of its allies.

 ??  ?? ‘‘A world full of uncertaint­ies and fears, even more so since the Covid-19 pandemic started,
is fostering populism and nationalis­m. As a result, scapegoats are needed to explain countries' woes, which is even more the case if you have long
been the hegemon.”
‘‘A world full of uncertaint­ies and fears, even more so since the Covid-19 pandemic started, is fostering populism and nationalis­m. As a result, scapegoats are needed to explain countries' woes, which is even more the case if you have long been the hegemon.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan