The economic reality facing China as leaders huddle
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The closed-door meeting is being closely watched for signs on how leaders intend to tackle the challenges facing China.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BEIJING - The top brass of China’s ruling Communist Party is gathering in Beijing this week to devise a strategy that will steer the country through 2030 and shape its trade relationships.
Having risen from isolation and poverty just decades ago to become a technological and manufacturing superpower, China is now the world’s second-largest economy, its exports filling global shipping lanes.
However, the challenges confronting leaders are considerable, with a rapidly ageing population, sluggish household spending and heightened trade frictions with the US and its allies weighing down growth.
This week’s Fourth Plenum of the Central Committee
Here are the key facets of the economic situation Beijing is staring down:
Consumer slump
Decades of explosive growth in China following sweeping market reforms in the late 1970s and 1980s were largely driven by export-oriented industrialisation and infrastructure investment.
Now, as demographics shift and urbanisation slows, economists argue the country must move towards a model centred on domestic consumption to sustain long-term growth.
But consumer sentiment in China – pummelled by the Covid-19 pandemic – remains cautious.
“Both cyclical and structural factors are behind the weak private consumption,” analysts from ANZ Research wrote this week.
Persistent woes in the real estate sector
Policy efforts that emerge from this week’s meeting “are expected to address income inequality and limited social welfare coverage”, the ANZ Research note added.
Adding to the complexity, China’s population has started to decline in recent years, despite Beijing ending its decades-long one-child policy in 2016.
Experts say this trend will result in a smaller workforce and changing consumption patterns over time.
Trade friction
The return of US President Donald Trump to the White House in 2025, and his unpredictable tariff policies, have presented renewed challenges for China’s export sector – a vital buoy for the economy.
So far, overseas shipments have withstood the pressure, in large part by diverting goods from the US to alternative markets, especially in South-east Asia.
However, trade tensions between the world’s top two economies remain unresolved, with Washington working to rally its allies against Beijing’s new curbs in the strategic rare earths industry
Observers are awaiting a potential in-person meeting this month
Maintaining rare earth ‘dominance’
China’s edge in the mining and processing of critical rare earths
“While efforts to break China’s dominance will intensify further, Beijing’s grip is unlikely to be loosened in the short to medium term,” said a report on Oct 21 by BMI, a unit of Fitch Solutions.
Overcapacity
Another closely watched issue is China’s industrial overcapacity.
“Since its property bubble burst around 2021, China has been focused on shifting its economic model toward manufacturing and investment to compensate for weak domestic consumption,” Nomura analysts said in a recent report.
“This has created overproduction in key industrial sectors, compelling China to increase exports to overseas markets.”
That has exacerbated trade tensions, with Beijing accused of flooding global markets
Property market crisis
As well as spooking potential home owners, the collapse of the real estate sector has dampened domestic demand for materials including steel, concrete and glass.
As party officials discuss economic challenges this week, the Nomura analysts wrote, “the primary domestic challenge” during the next five-year period is “cleaning up the property market mess”. AFP

