China’s annual congressional sessions have recently concluded. They lasted just six days. While those who attend conferences may think that six days sounds like a long time, it was, in fact, much shorter than normal—one of the shortest on record.
The idea is to put China’s economy and politics centre-stage, but unusually for China in recent years, there are problems with both.
Footage captured President Xi lecturing his close confidants, and fellow Standing Committee members seated around him during the judicial report session, made Xi’s paramount political status clear.
This year’s oddities
There was the odd mishap. A female reporter raced to the podium too early, and a car rammed into the gate of the Chinese leadership compound late at night, both of which attracted some attention.
Unmentioned were the continued absences of senior ministers and military men who went missing last year shortly before being removed from the posts.
These include former Foreign Minister Qin Gang, former Defence Minister General Li Shangfu, as well as General Li Yuchao, who headed the People’s Liberation Army’s (PLA) Rocket Force Unit, along with his deputy.
The premier’s press conference was cancelled without much warning. It tends to be a highlight and a rare window for China’s leader to showcase his persona.
That aside, China’s leaders still seized the moment to break ground for a ‘new normal’, moving on from the post-Covid rebound and entering a protracted period of economic, domestic, and international challenges.
In this new normal, China is battling the five structural forces in its economy: deceleration, deflation, debt, demographics, and decoupling. Let’s look at each.
Decelerating growth
China’s 2024 GDP growth target is an underwhelming 5%. If hit, this would be China’s slowest growth rate for decades (outside Covid).
Some wonder if 5% is tenable. In his ‘Government Work Report’, Xi said it was “a challenging target in a difficult period”.
The country’s economic transition and demographic forces have led to deflationary pressures. China’s CPI, an indicator of consumer confidence, has hovered in disinflationary or deflationary territory for the past 12 months, while Chinese PPI, an indicator of global aggregate demand for Chinese manufacturing, has contracted.
Demographic statistics do not bring much cheer. For instance, in 2022, China reached a population tipping point when the absolute population shrank. By 2050, a third of China's population will be aged 65+.
More concerning for planners is the even sharper fall in the national fertility rate, currently at a paltry one child per couple, when 2.1 is the national replacement level.
The labour force is falling, too, having peaked in 2017. This makes India and ASEAN countries more appealing as manufacturing supply chain destinations.