Foundation of China’s economic recovery not solid enough – party official

Foundation of China’s economic recovery not solid enough – party official

25 Mar    Finance News, PMN Business, REU

Article content

BEIJING — The foundation of China’s economic recovery is not solid enough, a senior Communist Party official said on Saturday, warning of possible spillover effects from global economic problems.

Some countries have to play a balancing act as they try to stabilize their economies, prices and financial markets, said Han Wenxiu, deputy head of the party’s office for financial and economic affairs, adding that the global economy was at risk of stagflation.

Article content

Such risks come as many developed countries aggressively tighten their monetary policy causing problems for banks as well as bringing foreign debt woes and financial market turmoil, he said at a government-organized China Development Forum, without naming any specific countries.

Article content

As a result, global supply chains face restructuring, he said.

“The foundation of China’s economic recovery is not yet solid enough,” Han said.

Recent economic data has shown that China’s economy picked up from COVID-19 slumps after the government abandoned its zero-COVID strategy late last year.

China is confident of reaching its annual economic growth target of around 5%, Han said.

He said the growth target had taken into account the need to expand employment and improve people’s livelihoods, as well as the potential growth capacity and various difficulties.

China has no apparent inflation or deflation at the moment, and it has a relatively large amount of room to maneuver on monetary policy, he said.

Han also said China would continue to expand market access and welcome foreign investment into the world’s second largest economy.

See also  Native American-led nonprofit says it bought 40 acres in the Black Hills of South Dakota

“China welcomes companies from all countries to come and invest and expects foreign firms to hold a long-term view and develop extensively in the market,” Han said.

(Reporting by Xu Jing, Winni Zhou, Ethan Wang and Ryan Woo; editing by Robert Birsel)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *