logo
Calls grow for China's household sector to be bigger economic driver

Calls grow for China's household sector to be bigger economic driver

Reuters08-07-2025
BEIJING, July 7 (Reuters) - 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.
Leaders are gathering proposals for their 15th five-year plan, a voluminous document that lays out priorities up to 2030. The plan is expected to be endorsed at a December Communist Party conference and approved by parliament in March.
Policy advisers told Reuters while they expect the document will elevate household consumption to a top goal in principle, it is likely to stop short of laying out an explicit target.
Household consumption currently accounts for 40% of gross domestic product - some advisers propose China should aim for 50% over the next two five-year cycles.
Economists have long urged Beijing to switch to a consumption-led economic model and rely less on debt-fuelled investment and exports for growth.
While China has so far largely withstood pressures from higher U.S. tariffs, fresh worries about industrial overcapacity, factory deflation and the resulting stress on jobs and incomes have heightened calls for a shift in long-term strategy.
"Relying on external demand makes us vulnerable to global shocks," a policy adviser said on condition of anonymity due to the topic's sensitivity.
"We should strengthen domestic consumption as a key driver of growth and economic transformation," said the source, echoing calls from two other advisers Reuters spoke with.
A fourth adviser said his proposals would not include this recommendation as "this is not something that can be easily achieved without the correct policies and reforms."
Calls for a more robust consumer sector are not new.
While Beijing has pledged structural changes for more than a decade, its household consumption share of GDP is roughly where it was in 2005 and far below the OECD average of 54%.
The difficulty, analysts say, is that China has to shift resources from the business and government sectors to households in ways that could slow growth. Japan entered its decades-long stagnation period with a household share of GDP of 50% in 1991. That only grew to 58% by 2013, before dipping back to 55%.
A 14th five-year plan progress report from 2023 lamented "insufficient mechanisms" to boost consumption.
The policy proposals for the 15th plan are largely the same ones Beijing had promised before, the advisers said.
These include bolstering welfare, relaxing an internal passport system blamed for deep urban-rural inequality, and other measures - including tax changes - to redistribute income towards those who have less and are more likely to spend it.
New proposals include using state-owned assets to shore up pension funds and propping up the wobbly stock market and the crisis-hit property sector to increase households' investment earnings.
"We have to increase household incomes, we have to boost transfers to low-income groups, but we've seen wage cuts," said a second adviser.
He added household demand has taken on increased importance at the upcoming five-year plan with discussions focusing on whether China should set a specific consumption target.
Yang Weimin, vice-chairman of the China Centre for International Economic Exchanges think-tank, said last month China should raise household consumption to over 50% of GDP by 2035.
The advisers expect a goal from the 14th plan to keep the manufacturing share of GDP relatively stable will survive another five years.
State-guided investment has turned manufacturing into a key growth engine.
But an argument is emerging that investing more in an industrial complex that already accounts for a third of global manufacturing brings diminishing returns.
A prominent Communist Party magazine last week called for a crackdown on price wars in various industries, in a nod to China's overcapacity and deflation.
Peng Sen, chairman of the China Society of Economic Reform, said in comments posted on the WeChat account of the Changan Avenue Reading Club, an informal body backed by senior officials, that sluggish consumption also hurts manufacturing profits and endangers jobs.
Peng said in March that China should boost final consumption, which includes household and government spending, as a share of GDP to 70% by 2035. The share stood at 56.6% in 2024.
But not all of China's policy thinkers favour consumer-led growth.
In a June article in financial outlet Yicai, government economist Yu Yongding said the concept was "theoretically incorrect" and incompatible with long-term development.
"Without investment, there is no growth and without growth, sustained consumption is difficult to achieve," Yu wrote.
As with the previous five-year plan, China is unlikely to set a specific GDP growth target for the next cycle, the advisers said. China targets growth of around 5% this year, the same goal as in 2024.
But ambitions laid out in 2021 to double the size of the economy by 2035 remain, the advisers said. This, as in the past, might mean delaying painful reforms needed to rebalance the economy towards consumption, analysts say.
"Growth during this period cannot be lower than 4%," said a third adviser. "We won't accept anything less."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

China to continue stimulating consumption, premier says
China to continue stimulating consumption, premier says

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

China to continue stimulating consumption, premier says

HONG KONG, Aug 18 (Reuters) - China will continue to boost consumption and protect people's livelihoods, expanding the country's positive growth trend, Premier Li Qiang told a State Council plenary meeting on Monday. Li, whose comments were broadcast by China's state broadcaster China Central Television, said authorities would strive to achieve the full year economic growth target set at roughly 5%. China would "remain calm and actively respond to various uncertainties", Li said, noting a "severe and complex external environment." A temporary trade truce reached by China and the United States in mid-May - and extended last week by a further 90 days - has prevented U.S. tariff rates on Chinese goods from returning to prohibitively high levels. However Chinese manufacturers' profits continue to take a hit from subdued demand and factory gate deflation at home. Li said China needed to strengthen domestic consumption and continue to stimulate the country's consumption potential by cleaning up restrictive measures and accelerating new growth areas such as services. Li added that China should adopt "forceful" measures to consolidate the stabilising trend in the country's housing market. He said it was necessary to make greater efforts to stabilise employment, ensure people's livelihood as well as ensure overall stability for society.

Payoneer and Stripe team on cross-border checkouts for SMBs
Payoneer and Stripe team on cross-border checkouts for SMBs

Finextra

timean hour ago

  • Finextra

Payoneer and Stripe team on cross-border checkouts for SMBs

Payoneer (NASDAQ: PAYO), the global financial technology company powering business growth across borders, today announced a strategic partnership with programmable financial services company Stripe. 0 This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author. The collaboration marks an expansion of Payoneer's Online Checkout offering for cross-border merchants looking to sell direct-to-consumer. Launching in key markets within the Asia Pacific (APAC) region first, including China and Hong Kong, the upgraded Payoneer Checkout capabilities — powered by Stripe's best-in-class technology — will empower Small and Medium-sized Businesses (SMBs) to accept a broader range of payments methods via online webstore checkout including Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) options like Affirm and Klarna, and digital wallets such as Apple Pay and Google Pay. In the three years since launching Payoneer Checkout, the company has scaled from zero to nearly $1 billion in run-rate annual volume, demonstrating rapid market adoption and strong customer demand. Over the last twelve months through June 30, 2025, the business has generated $30 million in revenue, representing over 100 percent year-over-year growth. "We are committed to simplifying cross-border online trade for SMBs," said Adam Cohen, Chief Growth Officer, Payoneer. "This partnership with Stripe is a strategic step in our journey to expand our Checkout offering and deliver a best-in-class user experience at scale. By combining Payoneer's local market distribution and expertise with Stripe's exceptional checkout technology, we're combining the strengths of both companies to deliver unmatched value to our customers." Through this partnership, Payoneer and Stripe are enabling enhanced customer conversion rates, improving acceptance rates, helping to reduce fraud, and expanding payment acceptance options for SMBs selling direct-to-consumer via their own eCommerce webstores. This enhanced Checkout experience aligns with Payoneer's strategic vision to expand its SMB financial stack through high-impact partnerships. With Stripe's advanced capabilities and Payoneer's customer-first approach, the partnership delivers unmatched value for entrepreneurs and businesses across the globe.

Why bats and newts are being blamed for Britain's sluggish economy
Why bats and newts are being blamed for Britain's sluggish economy

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Why bats and newts are being blamed for Britain's sluggish economy

Bad news for bats: the government is considering further changes to planning regulations in order to boost economic growth. Specifically, Rachel Reeves – desperate for the UK economy to grow and provide more jobs, homes and tax revenues – wants to relax the rules on wildlife and the environment, hence some headlines about bats, newts and snails. What does the chancellor want? To keep her job. That means getting Britain's wayward public finances under control, which means making the economic pie bigger so that tax receipts start rising without having to hammer workers and businesses every year with tax rises. She's not prepared to allow any flying mammals, rare amphibious creatures, fish or a few wildflowers to get in the way. Retained EU rules designed on the precautionary principle that a developer must prove there will be no net harm will go, and there'll be a cull in the list of 'protected species'. She wouldn't admit as much, but this is very much what Leavers would call a 'Brexit freedom'. Not much of a bonus for bats, though. Aren't they doing this already? No. The Planning and Infrastructure Bill before parliament proposes to restrict grounds for objection to a scheme, strengthen the powers of mayors and development corporations to impose decisions, and give developers more flexibility regarding nature migration schemes. Another law would be required to wage war on wildlife. Perhaps. He singled them out in an infamous speech last year that derided the '£100m bat tunnel holding up the country's single biggest infrastructure project', ie HS2. He is the Ozzy Osbourne of politics. What do we get in return? Growth. Specifically, 1.5 million new homes, 150 major infrastructure projects and, in the words of the prime minister: 'a very clear message …To the nimbys, the regulators, the blockers and bureaucrats … The alliance of naysayers … The people who say, no, 'Britain can't do this. We can't get things done in our country'. We say to them – you no longer have the upper hand … Britain says yes.' The country will almost certainly be better off, materially, from the additional investment, but it is equally apparent that all the new runways, power lines, roads and greenfield housebuilding will have an unfortunate impact on the environment and visual amenity. There's always a trade-off. Why didn't the Tories do this? They are, or were, the party of the countryside, hence their determined opposition to onshore windfarms, rural solar panel installations, housing developments in 'nice' areas and pylons marching across green and pleasant lands. What will happen? Labour will bulldoze both bits of legislation through, albeit with some grumbles from the new generation of Labour MPs who represent historically rural Conservative constituencies. Most opposition parties, including Reform, who don't think we need any green energy or housing projects at all, will make their objections clear. At the next general election, Labour will probably find its country seats much the hardest battleground.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store