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Two Sessions: Amid Uncertainty, China's Quest For Bold Development

Mar. 06, 2021 8:13 AM ETYINN, TDF, GXC, YANG, CXSE, PGJ, KGRN, FXP, CHN, CN, XPP, YXI, FCA, FLCH, KESG30 Comments
Dan Steinbock profile picture
Dan Steinbock
77 Followers

Summary

  • At a historical moment of hope and uncertainty, China pledges bold economic development despite global tensions.
  • China's annual "Two Sessions" meeting has approved national priorities for 2021.
  • China plans to create more than 11 million new jobs in 2021, while keeping inflation rate at 3 percent and cutting the deficit-to-GDP ratio to 3.2 percent.

At a historical moment of hope and uncertainty, China pledges bold economic development, despite global tensions.

China's annual "Two Sessions" meeting has approved national priorities for 2021. Delivered by Premier Li Keqiang, the Government Work Report set a growth target of over 6 percent for Chinese economy for 2021, releasing a numeric goal after it was skipped in 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

China plans to create more than 11 million new jobs in 2021, while keeping inflation rate (CPI) at 3 percent and cutting the deficit-to-GDP ratio to 3.2 percent. The goal is to increase annual R&D spending by more than 7 percent in the next five years, including foreign-funded R&D centers in China.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic and the severe global contraction, China's 2020 real GDP growth climbed to 2.3 percent, making it the only major economy to grow. In 2021, international observers project China's growth to rise up to 8 percent, due to a low base in 2020 and the ongoing recovery momentum.

In addition to fiscal and monetary policies, government's focus is increasingly on job creation and consumer prices that have a direct impact on per capita incomes. This is vital in light of the modernization goals of China's 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-35).

Doubling GDP, per capita incomes by 2035

Some two decades ago, Goldman Sachs's Jim O'Neil coined the idea of BRIC economies, predicting China's gross domestic product (GDP) would catch up with that of the United States by the early 2040s.

During our conversation in 2009, I projected the inflection point to result a decade earlier, around late 2020s, while O'Neill said Goldman Sachs was also revising its catch-up prediction. Despite the failed global recovery in the 2010s and US tariff wars, these projections remain in schedule and may be accelerating.

As the

This article was written by

Dan Steinbock profile picture
77 Followers
Dr Dan Steinbock is an internationally recognized expert of the multipolar world. He focuses on international business, international relations, investment and risk among the major advanced economies (G7) and large emerging economies (BRICS and beyond). He has consulted for international organizations, government agencies, financial institutions, multinational corporations and SMEs, competitiveness institutes and NGOs. His multipolar advisory and consulting activities include strategic services, policy briefs and guidance, risk management, scenario analysis, economic briefings, competitiveness and innovation analysis, trade and investment assessments – as well as multipolar corporate training and speaking engagements. In addition to his advisory activities (www.differencegroup.net), he cooperates with major US universities (Stern School of Business/NYU, Columbia University, Harvard Business School and Prof Michael E. Porter’s international cluster affiliates) as well as international think-tanks, incl. India China and America Institute (USA), Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (China) and EU Center (Singapore). He is a Senior Fulbright Scholar. His commentaries are released in major outlets in a dozen nations across all world regions, from the United States and Europe to China and India. He divides his time between New York City, Shanghai, occasionally Europe and often traveling, especially in Asia.

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