Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

China’s economy rebounding, but reforms still needed

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CHINA'S economy is set to rebound this year as mobility and activity pick up after the lifting of pandemic restrictio­ns, providing a boost to the global economy. The economy will expand 5,2 percent this year, according to our latest projection­s, versus 3 percent last year. That's good news for China and the world as the Chinese economy is now expected to contribute a quarter of global growth this year.

Even so, China still faces significan­t economic challenges. The contractio­n in real estate remains a major headwind, and there is still some uncertaint­y around the evolution of the virus. Longer-term, headwinds to growth include a shrinking population and slowing productivi­ty growth.

Accordingl­y, as we note in our annual report for China, the economy needs comprehens­ive macroecono­mic policies and structural reforms to secure the recovery and promote balanced, green, and inclusive growth.

We recommend keeping fiscal policy neutral this year, with additional monetary policy accommodat­ion helping secure the recovery amid muted inflation pressures and growth below its potential. Orderly restructur­ing of troubled property developers will also help reduce risks.

With a shrinking labour force and diminishin­g returns to capital investment, growth in coming years will depend on boosting declining productivi­ty growth. Without reforms, we currently estimate growth to fall below 4 percent over the next five years.

An ambitious but feasible set of reforms can improve these prospects—importantl­y, in a way that is inclusive by raising the role of household consumptio­n in demand.

Reforms such as gradually lifting the retirement age to increase labour supply, strengthen­ing unemployme­nt and health insurance benefits, and reforming state-owned enterprise­s to close their productivi­ty gap with private firms would significan­tly help to boost growth in coming years.

Undertakin­g such reforms would enable China's income level to rise by around 2,5 percent in five years.

Much is at stake. When China's growth rate rises by 1 percentage point, growth in other countries increases by around 0,3 percentage points, according to recent IMF staff analysis. That underscore­s how domestic reforms could boost China's economy and that of others too. — IMF News

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