
China's economy will exceed $19.5tn in 2025: State planner
BEIJING: The size of China's economy will exceed 140 trillion yuan ($19.5 trillion) this year, the head of the state planner said as policymakers look to steer the country beyond the current five-year policy plan, which concludes at the end of 2025. The world's second-largest economy is grappling with a prolonged trade war with the United States and persistent deflationary pressures.
'Looking back at the 14th five-year plan period, the challenges encountered were greater than expected, but the achievements exceeded expectations,' Zheng Shanjie, chair of the National Development and Reform Commission, said at a press conference. Zheng highlighted progress made under the 2021–2025 five-year plan, which focuses on key priorities such as economic development, technological innovation, green transformation and improvements in people's livelihoods. In its 14th five-year plan released in 2021, China dropped a specific gross domestic product growth target for 2021–2025, but has continued to set annual growth targets during the plan period, with the goal for 2025 set at around 5 percent.
The economy grew at an average annual pace of 5.4 percent from 2021 to 2024, despite the impact of COVID-19, official data showed. Zheng said China has built the world's largest and most comprehensive manufacturing sector, strengthening its industrial and supply chains and boosting confidence in the country's ability to handle various risks and challenges.
Foreign technology curbs would only strengthen China's self-reliance and its capacity to be innovative, Zheng added. Officials at the briefing offered no details on the 15th five-year plan, as Chinese leaders are still gathering proposals for the blueprint, which will outline national priorities through 2030.
Chinese government advisers are stepping up calls to make the household sector's contribution to broader economic growth a top priority at Beijing's upcoming five-year policy plan, as trade tensions and deflation threaten the outlook. Consumer prices in China rose slightly in June, official data showed on Wednesday, snapping a four-month decline even as factory gate prices were bruised by a fierce trade war with Washington. Chinese officials have been trying to revive sluggish domestic spending since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic, with the government's official growth target at risk.
That comes just as leaders face heightened turmoil sparked by US President Donald Trump's trade war. The consumer price index — a key measure of inflation — edged up 0.1 percent on-year last month, according to data published by China's National Bureau of Statistics (NBS). The reading beat the 0.1 percent drop forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists and was an improvement on the 0.1 percent fall seen in May.
The flip into positive territory was 'mainly due to the rebound in prices of industrial consumer goods', NBS statistician Dong Lijuan said in a statement. Dong noted that 'policies of expanding domestic demand and promoting consumption continued to be effective'.
Beijing has set its official growth target this year at around five percent, although many economists consider that goal to be ambitious because domestic spending remains sluggish. The government has introduced a series of aggressive moves since last year in an attempt to get people spending, including key rate cuts, abolishing some restrictions on homebuying and a consumer goods trade-in scheme.
In a signal of further deflationary pressure, Chinese factory gate prices fell in June at the fastest rate in nearly two years, the NBS also said on Wednesday. The producer price index declined 3.6 percent year-on-year, accelerating from a 3.3 percent drop in May, and faster than the 3.2 percent decline estimated in the Bloomberg survey.
'I think it is too early to call the end of deflation at this stage,' Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, wrote in a note. China's once-booming real estate market has been mired in a crisis for years, stalling many large construction projects and spooking would-be homebuyers. 'The momentum in the property sector is still weakening,' Zhang said.
The slump in the property market — long a key driver of growth — gives China's exports a more prominent role in boosting economic activity. However, the outlook for Chinese exports has also darkened with fierce headwinds on trade this year. Trump revealed new tariff rates for many countries this week, with many at levels similar to those announced — and later paused — in April.
Zhang said 'the market is too complacent about the damage of such high tariffs on both the US and the global economy'. — Agencies
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
a day ago
- Kuwait Times
Nvidia, AMD to pay 15% of China chip sale revenue to US
BEIJING/WASHINGTON: Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices have agreed to give the US government 15 percent of revenue from sales to China of certain advanced computer chips, a US official said on Sunday, in an unusual move likely to faze American companies. The deal is extremely rare for the US and marks President Donald Trump's latest intervention in corporate decision-making, after pressuring executives to invest in American manufacturing and demanding new Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan resign over ties to Chinese companies. Analysts said the levy may hit margins at the chipmakers and set a precedent for Washington to tax critical US exports, potentially extending beyond semiconductors. Trump's administration halted sales of Nvidia's H20 chips to China in April, but the company said last month it had won clearance to resume shipments and hoped to start deliveries soon. The Commerce Department has started issuing licenses for the sale of H20 chips to China, another US official said on Friday. Both the US officials declined to named because details have not been made public. The China curbs are expected to cost Nvidia and AMD billions of dollars in revenue, and successive US administrations have sought in recent years to limit Beijing's access to cutting-edge chips that could bolster China's military. Washington does not feel the sale of H20 and equivalent chips compromises national security, said the first US official. The official did not know when or how the agreement with the chip companies would be implemented, but said the administration would be in compliance with the law. The US Constitution prohibits Congress from laying taxes and duties on articles exported from any state. The Export Clause applies to taxes and duties, not user fees. When asked if Nvidia had agreed to pay 15 percent of revenues to the US, a company spokesperson said: 'We follow rules the US government sets for our participation in worldwide markets.' 'While we haven't shipped H20 to China for months, we hope export control rules will let America compete in China and worldwide,' the spokesperson added. A spokesperson for AMD said the US approved its applications to export some AI processors to China, but did not directly address the revenue-sharing agreement and said the company's business adheres to all US export controls. The US Commerce Department did not immediately comment. China's foreign ministry said the country has repeatedly stated its position on US chip exports. The ministry has previously accused Washington of using technology and trade measures to 'maliciously contain and suppress China.' The Financial Times, which first reported the development, said the chip firms agreed to the arrangement as a condition for obtaining the export licenses for their semiconductors, including AMD's chips. It added that the Trump administration had yet to determine how to use the money. 'The Chinese market is significant for both these companies so even if they have to give up a bit of the money, they would otherwise make it looks like a logical move on paper,' AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould said. Still, analysts and experts questioned the logic of resuming sales if the chips could pose a national security risk. 'Decisions on export licenses should be determined by national security considerations and the tradeoffs of US policy goals, not a revenue-creating possibility,' said Martin Chorzempa, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, an independent research institution. 'What it ends up creating is an incentive to control things, to then extract a payment, rather than controlling things because we're actually concerned about the risk to national security.' US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said last month the planned resumption of sales of the AI chips was part of US negotiations with China to get rare earths and described the H20 as Nvidia's 'fourth-best chip' in an interview with CNBC. He said it was in US interests for Chinese firms to use American technology, even if the most advanced chips remained barred, to keep them on a US 'tech stack'. Some elements of Trump's trade policy are already facing legal scrutiny, with a federal appeals panel skeptical of his claim that a 1977 law, traditionally used to sanction enemies or freeze assets, also empowered him to impose tariffs. 'We aren't sure we like the precedent this sets,' Bernstein analysts said of the revenue-share deal. 'Will it stop with Chinese AI? Will it stop with controlled products? Will other companies be required to pay to sell into the region?' 'It feels like a slippery slope to us.' The analysts estimated the deal would cut gross margins on the China-bound processors by 5 to 15 percentage points, shaving about a point from Nvidia and AMD's overall margins. Nvidia generated $17 billion in revenue from China in the fiscal year ending January 26, representing 13 percent of total sales. — Reuters

Kuwait Times
a day ago
- Kuwait Times
China hopes for ‘positive' outcomes from tariff talks
BEIJING: Beijing is looking to Washington for 'positive' trade outcomes as a tariff truce between the world's two biggest economies remains in limbo, hours before higher tit-for-tat duties are due to return. While the United States and China slapped escalating tariffs on each other's products this year—reaching prohibitive triple-digit levels and snarling trade—both countries in May agreed to temporarily lower these levels. But their 90-day halt in steeper levies is due to expire Tuesday, with all eyes now on a path forward. 'We hope that the US will work with China to follow the important consensus reached during the phone call between the two heads of state,' said Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian in a statement. He added that Beijing also hopes Washington will 'strive for positive outcomes on the basis of equality, respect and mutual benefit.' Although both sides reached a pact to de-escalate tensions after high level talks in Geneva in May, their truce has been shaky. In June, key economic officials convened in London as disagreements emerged and US officials accused their counterparts of violating the pact. Policymakers again met in Stockholm last month. But even as both countries appeared to be seeking to push back the reinstatement of duties, US trade envoy Jamieson Greer said last month that President Donald Trump will have the 'final call' on any such extension. Last week, US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said in an interview that it is likely Trump will further the pause by another 90 days. The White House did not immediately respond to queries on the matter on Monday. Trump said in a social media post late Sunday that he hoped China will 'quickly quadruple its soybean orders,' adding that this would be a way to balance trade with the United States. For now, fresh US tariffs on Chinese goods this year stand at 30 percent, while Beijing's corresponding levy on US products is at 10 percent. Since returning to the presidency in January, Trump has slapped a 10-percent 'reciprocal' tariff on almost all trading partners, aimed at addressing trade practices Washington deemed unfair. This surged to varying, steeper levels last Thursday for dozens of economies. Major partners like the European Union, Japan and South Korea now see a 15-percent US duty on their products, while the level went as high as 41 percent for Syria. The 'reciprocal' tariffs exclude sectors that have been separately targeted, such as steel and aluminum, and those that are being investigated like pharmaceuticals and semiconductors. Trump has also taken separate aim at individual countries such as Brazil over the trial of former president Jair Bolsonaro, who is accused of planning a coup, and India over its purchase of Russian oil. – AFP

Kuwait Times
a day ago
- Kuwait Times
Al-Sabriya housing project moves forward with Chinese inspection
Project to provide 55,000 housing units • Chinese officials view sites of new labor cities KUWAIT: Minister of State for Municipal and Housing Affairs Abdullatif Al-Mishari led an aerial inspection of the Al-Sabriya city project along with two labor city sites to update a visiting Chinese technical delegation on the scope and objectives of these developments. 'Al-Sabriya represents one of the largest housing and development initiatives in northern Kuwait,' he told Kuwait News Agency (KUNA). He also highlighted the critical role of the labor cities, which aim to relocate workers from residential and investment areas into fully integrated living environments that meet the highest environmental, health, and living standards. This visit follows a July announcement that Kuwait will host four official delegations from major Chinese state-owned enterprises. These delegations will explore investment opportunities in key development sectors, including infrastructure and logistics. KUWAIT: Minister of State for Municipal Affairs and Minister of State for Housing Affairs Abdullatif Hamed Al-Mishari and officials inspect the Al-Sabriya project sites. - KUNA During the inspection, Al-Mishari emphasized the projects' significance in advancing Kuwait's strategic urban development and housing objectives. 'Our goal with this tour is to strengthen areas of joint cooperation between the two countries, especially in developing modern cities and infrastructure in line with Kuwait's future vision and strategic plans for sustainable urban development,' Al-Mishari said. He added that the visit is part of the government's ongoing efforts to monitor strategic projects. The ministerial delegation included senior Kuwaiti officials alongside a high-level Chinese government team. The joint visit aimed to align technical teams and accelerate the implementation of agreements signed between the two countries. Al-Mishari also held coordination meetings with representatives from two Chinese state companies to discuss technical and investment cooperation, sharing insights on global best practices applicable to Kuwait's urban planning and infrastructure development. Earlier this year, Al-Mishari announced the launch of consultancy tenders for three new cities—Khairan, Nawaf Al-Ahmad, and Al-Sabriya—that together will deliver around 170,000 housing units. Khairan will cover 135 square kilometers with 60,000 units, Nawaf Al-Ahmad will span 125 square kilometers with 55,000 units, and Al-Sabriya will extend across 80 square kilometers, offering 55,000 housing units. 'Our goal is to remove administrative obstacles and provide high-quality housing through streamlined processes and clear execution plans,' Al-Mishari said. — Agencies