China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China model stands up to pandemic test

- By WANG MINGJIE in London wangmingji­e@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The absolutely crucial part of all of this is for China to maintain growth into 2021 driven by domestic demand, especially its consumer.”

China’s skillful management of its COVID-19 outbreak, enabling it to emerge as the only major economy to grow in 2020, shows that the China model works for the country, experts say.

At last month’s Central Economic Work Conference in Beijing, the country’s leadership agreed that 2020 was an “extremely unusual year” in the history of the new republic since 1949 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, and China has now become “the only major economy in the world to achieve positive growth”.

“The key message coming out of the conference is that China has managed to maintain stability in an unstable world,” said Ben Cavender, managing director at China Market Research Group. China would like to clearly make the point that its model of economic stewardshi­p is the correct one for the country, he added.

His view is echoed by Stephen Perry, chairman of The 48 Group Club, an independen­t business network committed to promoting trade and cultural links between the UK and China.

Perry said that China, like many other nations, has suffered a severe economic imbalance, but it underwent rectificat­ions. China’s recovery is extraordin­ary.

He said many nations have had more difficulti­es because they expected the pandemic would not be so bad and that it would ease. In contrast, “China prepared for the worst and worked for the best”, Perry said.

Although China suffered a record-setting steepest dive in quarterly economic performanc­e and subsequent surge in the first and second quarters of 2020, respective­ly, the world’s secondlarg­est economy is now benefiting from a return to near normalcy. This, in turn, fueled the strong economic rebound. That’s all thanks to the country’s quick and decisive response at the onset of the pandemic.

According to the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, or OECD, China is projected to record real GDP growth of 8 percent in 2021 and 4.9 percent in 2022. In the OECD’s recent economic outlook, the Paris-based internatio­nal organizati­on said China was expected to account for more than a third of world economic growth in 2021.

China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index came in at 52 for December, the second-highest reading for last year after it hit a three-year high in November. The late-year performanc­e in the gauge of manufactur­ing activity shows that the economic recovery is well underway.

In a move to chart the course for

Jim O’Neill, leading British economist

the economy in 2021, Chinese leaders outlined key missions at the conference, including strengthen­ing the national strategic technologi­es, enhancing the independen­t ability to develop industrial supply chains, and upholding the strategic keystone of expanding domestic demand.

Reposition­ing

Chris Rudd, deputy vice-chancellor and head of the Singapore campus for Australia’s James Cook University, said: “China’s reposition­ing as a middle-income country enables its leaders to leverage the growth from increasing domestic consumptio­n to reset its supply chains, focusing domestical­ly on those strategic technologi­es which will underpin its future developmen­t, especially in the tech industries.

“Meanwhile. new opportunit­ies like RCEP (Regional Comprehens­ive Economic Partnershi­p) will enable Chinese business to optimize its supply chains working, for example, with ASEAN nations to bring wider economic benefit to the region,” added Rudd, referring to countries in the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations.

Analysts say the trade war initiated by the United States, along with the COVID-19 pandemic, has pointed to China’s need to further push economic sustainabi­lity initiative­s, as well as initiative­s that accelerate investment into key sectors where China has traditiona­lly been reliant on other markets.

Cavender said: “2020 highlighte­d key areas where China is exposed and I think we will see heavy investment into sectors that China deems to be critical to the country’s long-term success … We are also likely to see policies in place to foster domestic travel and domestic consumptio­n in a bid to capture more spending capacity of Chinese consumers.”

Jim O’Neill, a leading British economist and chair of the internatio­nal think tank Chatham House, said: “The absolutely crucial part of all of this is for China to maintain growth into 2021 driven by domestic demand, especially its consumer.”

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