China holds urgent meetings with business leaders on how to revitalise the economy

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Sources said officials are discussing a broad package of stimulus measures, including for the faltering property market.

Sources said officials are discussing a broad package of stimulus measures, including for the faltering property market.

PHOTO: AFP

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Senior Chinese officials are soliciting advice from business leaders and economists on how to revitalise the economy in a flurry of meetings that attendees have characterised as unusually urgent in their tone.

Top officials have held at least six consultations in recent weeks with the executives, according to people present who asked not to be identified when discussing sensitive issues.

Leaders pressed those assembled for ideas on ways to

stimulate the economy,

restore confidence in the private sector and revive the real estate industry, the sources said.

In response, the business leaders and economists called on the government to make urgent policy revisions and adopt a more market-oriented, rather than planning-led, approach to growth, they added.

There was a consensus among high-level government officials and some 10 people present at one meeting about two weeks ago that more and better-coordinated monetary and fiscal stimulus is needed, according to one participant.

The State Council did not reply to a request for comment on the meetings.

The meetings come as China is struggling with a post-pandemic economic recovery stifled by weak sentiment that is proving hard to reverse, after Covid-19 lockdowns and a series of abrupt policy crackdowns.

Beijing now appears to be gearing up to take more decisive action to counter the downturn, with the central bank unexpectedly cutting interest rates this week and people familiar with the matter saying officials are discussing a broad package of stimulus measures, including for the

faltering property market.

Data out on Thursday also showed China’s economy slowed further in May, with retail sales growth moderating, industrial production weakening and fixed-asset investment continuing to struggle.

The People’s Bank of China also cut a key interest rate and injected US$33 billion (S$44.3 billion) into financial markets on Thursday to boost the economy.

Seeking solutions

Two people at several of the meetings said officials acknowledged China’s economy was facing a critical period and displayed an impetus to finding solutions they had not seen before.

Senior figures from regulators and other government bodies also recently met executives in Beijing and asked for their suggestions on how to encourage private companies and overseas investors to return or expand in China, according to a person familiar with the matter.

“Officials are clearly aware that the economy is not booming and animal spirits remain sluggish,” said Mr Christopher Beddor, deputy China research director at Gavekal Dragonomics, adding that there had been concern in the business community in recent months that officials were not showing enough urgency about the problems.

While senior state leaders regularly meet economists and company representatives, those encounters are usually followed by an official readout.

The six meetings in recent weeks did not result in a statement and appeared to have been more ad hoc in nature.

Several business heads from financial institutions have separately said they had also received an unusually high number of requests from regulators in 2023 to report their business data and challenges, along with meeting invitations to discuss the economy.

After speaking to firms on a recent research trip to Chinese cities, Ms Zerlina Zeng, senior credit analyst at CreditSights Singapore, said tech and education crackdowns had “scarred” business owners, along with policies favouring state-owned enterprises.

She added: “We’re watching out for the Politburo meeting in July for more structural reforms to address the weak business confidence.” BLOOMBERG

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