China expected to target GDP growth of around 5% in 2024

Economists polled expect the Chinese economy to grow about 4.6 per cent in 2024. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

HONG KONG – China is expected to set its annual growth rate for 2024 at around 5 per cent when the national legislature meets this week, a fairly ambitious target for a government grappling with severe economic challenges.

Almost all the 27 economists surveyed by Bloomberg about the upcoming annual National People’s Congress (NPC) session expect Beijing to announce a growth target similar to that of 2023, albeit one that will be harder to reach given a higher base of comparison.

Economists polled in a separate, broader survey expect the economy to grow around 4.6 per cent in 2024.

China’s Two Sessions meetings will kick off in Beijing this week, with the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference opening on March 4 and the NPC session on March 5.

At the NPC, Premier Li Qiang is scheduled to deliver his first government work report on March 5, outlining key economic targets for measures, including the gross domestic product (GDP) growth and fiscal deficit.

These targets could serve as a precursor to Beijing’s broader policies for the year as it seeks to arrest an erosion of confidence.

Top officials have signalled they likely will not rely on massive stimulus given concerns around creating systemic risks, and there will be a tougher comparison in 2024 since the growth in 2023 benefited from the post-pandemic reopening.

“Expectations are perhaps unrealistically high that the Two Sessions in March will produce major policy stimulus,” Ms Erica Tay, economist at Maybank Securities, said in a survey response.

“Policymakers may announce ambitious growth targets, but the economy remains weighed down by excess capacity and the property slump.”

China will likely run a smaller budget deficit of 3.28 per cent of GDP in 2024, while ramping up new sovereign bond issuance by more than 20 per cent, according to economists polled by Bloomberg.

The quota for local government bond issuance is estimated to remain largely unchanged at four trillion yuan (S$756 billion).

The target for the surveyed urban jobless rate will also likely remain at 5.5 per cent.

President Xi Jinping’s government is still contending with a plethora of structural problems, including a persistent property crisis and stubborn deflation.

Recent data suggested an uneven recovery in the world’s No. 2 economy: a slump in the nation’s home sales dragged on, and factory activities shrank for the fifth straight month in February, while travel and tourism picked up during a recent long holiday. BLOOMBERG

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