Share This

Showing posts with label ForeignInvestment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ForeignInvestment. Show all posts

Friday, 20 December 2024

China Policy shift designed to spur growth

 Beijing to tackle economic challenges head-on in 2025

Stable recovery: Li attends a conference in Beijing. The Premier chaired the meeting where it was approved to have localities use special purpose bonds for land reserves and the acquisition of commercial properties for government subsidised housing. — Reuters

BEIJING: China’s shift to a more proactive financial policy and a moderately loose monetary policy next year signals the nation’s resolve to tackle economic challenges head-on and take an active role in spurring growth, says a senior official.

In 2025, China will exercise a more proactive financial policy for the first time, and shift its monetary stance to a moderately loose approach, which marks an end to the 14-year run of a prudent monetary policy, said an official from the Office of the Central Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs.

The official’s comments, according to a report from Xinhua News Agency, came after the nation’s policymakers set the policy agenda for the world’s second-largest economy at the annual Central Economic Work Conference in Beijing last week.

The directional shift indicated the central authorities’ concern that the domestic economy continues to face substantial headwinds, both from evolving external conditions as well as lingering domestic challenges, the official said.

On Monday, the State Council, China’s Cabinet, urged relevant departments to translate the decisions adopted at the Central Economic Work Conference into detailed plans and deliver them on the ground as soon as possible.

In a move to improve the management of local government special purpose bonds, it was decided at Monday’s State Council meeting, chaired by Premier Li Qiang, that a negative list approach will be introduced to identify the areas where these bonds can be channelled.

The new policy will also allow localities to use special purpose bonds for land reserves and to support the acquisition of existing commercial housing units for use as government subsidised housing, the meeting said.

China is still well positioned to ramp up its counter-cyclical adjustments to provide robust support to achieve the nation’s full-year economic targets in 2025, said the official from the Office of the Central Committee for Financial and Economic Affairs.

“A higher deficit-to-gross domestic product ratio and cuts to the reserve requirement ratio and interest rates are in the pipeline,” said the official.

Expanding domestic demand will be a strategic priority next year, with a particular emphasis on boosting consumption, the official said, adding that dedicated efforts will be made to enhance consumption capacity and bolster consumers’ willingness to spend.

To this end, the central authorities will utilise various policy levers, including increased direct financial investments in end-consumer segments, as well as measures to improve the social security system, in order to drive steady growth in people’s incomes, the official said.

Moreover, after the effective implementation of consumer goods trade-in programs this year, China will expand the scope and funding for these initiatives next year, to include more consumer product categories and optimise the subsidy process, the official said.

As another crucial component of domestic demand, China still maintains significant investment potential, the official said.

He stressed that the nation will take steps to anchor the expectations of private enterprises and deepen institutional opening-up in key sectors for foreign businesses, with the aim of effectively boosting investment momentum.

At a time when the headwinds of economic globalisation and geopolitical risks are rising, it is all the more crucial for China to introduce more policies for voluntary and unilateral opening-up and bolster global trade and investment partnerships in the process, the official said.

China will subscribe to high-standard international economic and trade rules, and expand the globally oriented network of high-standard free-trade areas, in a bid to steadily enhance institutional opening-up, the official said.

The country will expand pilot programmes for foreign investors in sectors such as telecommunications and healthcare, and take well-paced steps to further open the Internet, education, culture and other sectors, the official added.

In a concerted push to shore up the resilience of its foreign trade, the official said that China will deploy a comprehensive set of tools to support enterprises in exploring diversified international markets, promote the development of cross-border eCommerce, and deepen cooperation under the Belt and Road Initiative.

As for the real estate sector, with clear indications of halting the decline and moving towards stabilisation after a range of pro-housing policies were introduced in September, it is imperative to exert sustained efforts to ensure a stable recovery next year, the official said. — China Daily/ANN


Rightways