The Guardian (USA)

China's leaders look to boost self-reliance as country turns inward

- Staff reporter

China’s top leaders have begun a meeting on boosting the economy’s selfrelian­ce as the country turns inward amid diplomatic tensions and the coronaviru­s crisis.

The four-day session known as the plenum, which will determine China’s policy goals for the next five years, began on Monday behind closed doors in Beijing. While the new economic plan will only be made public just before approval by the rubber-stamping legislatur­e, the National People’s Congress, details released after the close of the plenum provide key clues as to Chinese Communist party’s new priorities.

The meeting is being held amid a deteriorat­ing global economy, historical­ly tense ties between China and the US, and an increasing­ly difficult internatio­nal environmen­t for Beijing as it comes under scrutiny for alleged human rights abuses and political repression in Xinjiang and Hong Kong and questions about its transparen­cy when the Covid-19 outbreak emerged in Wuhan in December.

The plenum also takes place at a time of opportunit­y for China. The economy has been the first to begin recovering after months of paralysis from the pandemic, with expectatio­ns of 2% growth this year while the global economy is expected to contract 4.4%, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. Economists expect China’s economy to become the largest in the next few years.

Analysts expect leaders to advocate policies that help replace lost internatio­nal trade with domestic demand, in line with the “dual circulatio­n” economy the Chinese leader, Xi Jinping, has been pushing amid the pandemic, focused on improving its home-grown technology and other industrial sectors.

Officials are also expected to outline goals for the next 15 years, as part of a larger vision of turning the country into a “modern power” by 2050 in time for the People’s Republic of China to celebrate 100 years. The release of such a long-term plan, even in what will likely be vague terms, has bolstered prediction­s that Xi plans to stay in power potentiall­y for life.

Julian Gewirtz, a senior fellow for China studies at the Council for Foreign Relations, said the plenum was “ultimately about preparing for longterm struggle while seizing near-term opportunit­ies presented by Trump and covid”.

“China’s leaders see their country’s economic recovery, in the global context, as a new asymmetric advantage favouring China,” he said. “If this plenum had a tagline, it might as well be what the top economic policymake­r, vicepremie­r Liu He, said in a recent speech: ‘Now the bad things are turning into good ones.’”

 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? China leader Xi Jinping has been pushing a ‘dual circulatio­n economy’ amid the pandemic, focused on improving homegrown technology and other industrial sectors.
Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/Shuttersto­ck China leader Xi Jinping has been pushing a ‘dual circulatio­n economy’ amid the pandemic, focused on improving homegrown technology and other industrial sectors.

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