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Why China is limping into the Year of the Dragon

The GDP deflator, the widest measure of prices in the economy, has fallen for the last three quarters, the longest streak since 1999.

February 10, 2024 / 19:49 IST
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Xi Jinping, President of China, File image (Reuters)
Xi Jinping, President of China, File image (Reuters)

As China heads into the lunar Year of the Dragon, traditionally seen as one of the most auspicious creatures on the zodiac, the country’s leaders are struggling to restore confidence at home and abroad.

The economy is besieged by deflation, a persistent housing market slump and a stock selloff. And Beijing’s piecemeal stimulus policies—such as lowering bank reserve requirements to encourage more lending and issuing more government bonds to fund construction projects—don’t seem to be improving sentiment.

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A key issue is the government’s focus on promoting what President Xi Jinping calls “high-quality development,” an umbrella term for a variety of policy goals, from boosting China’s high-tech capabilities to combating social inequality. That’s a more complex ambition than officials’ earlier single-minded fixation on achieving high levels of economic expansion. “The biggest challenge is Beijing’s inattention to deteriorating growth, which exacerbates all the structural and secular problems China faces,” says Houze Song, an economist at the Paulson Institute, a think tank focused on US-China relations. “And the solution is to assign a bigger weight to growth in government policy.”

Here are five charts that zero in on China’s pain points in 2024.