Li
Qiang, China’s New Premier Business Confidence
Li
Qiang, the country’s No. 2 leader, sought to reassure
entrepreneurs who have been wary of making new investments.
·
The state-led banking system has been
steering more loans in recent years to state-owned enterprises.
Government-controlled construction companies have squeezed out many private
real estate developers.
·
many local governments have forced
private companies to make large “donations” or pay arbitrarily imposed fines to
help cover the costs of social programs.
·
Mr. Li delivered the most forceful
statement by a Chinese leader in years of the need to preserve the vitality of
the private sector.
·
Businesses of all forms of ownership
will be treated equally, protecting the property rights and interests of
entrepreneurs according to the law
·
Mr. Xi delivered brief remarks before
Mr. Li at the close of the nine-day annual session of China’s largely ceremonial,
Communist Party-controlled legislature, the National People’s Congress.
·
In a move seen as signaling
continuity, the party retained the leaders of the central bank, the Ministry of
Commerce and the Ministry of Finance.
China’s new premier,
the country’s No. 2 leader after Xi Jinping, sought on Monday to reinvigorate
confidence in the faltering economy, promising that private-sector
companies would be treated equally with state-owned ones and that the property
rights and other interests of entrepreneurs would be strictly respected.
Premier Li Qiang, who took office on Saturday, strongly endorsed the
role of entrepreneurs after a decade in which the state and the ruling
Communist Party have played a steadily growing role in China’s economy, with
some pro-party commentators castigating big businesses. Weak confidence,
spending and investment by consumers and private businesses have hurt the
economy, which has slowed sharply over the past few years.
The Communist Party is under
immense pressure to revive growth, which was battered by nearly three years of
“zero Covid” restrictions, including mass testing and quarantines. Lengthy city
lockdowns that confined hundreds of millions of people to their homes disrupted
factory production and left consumers and businesses alike with little
confidence to spend.
Even after the government
lifted those pandemic rules in December, many entrepreneurs have been wary of
making new investments. Some have even left
the country as the climate for private businesses has
deteriorated.
The state-led banking system
has been steering more loans in recent years to state-owned enterprises.
Government-controlled construction companies have squeezed out many private
real estate developers. The Communist Party has insisted on a larger role in
the decision-making of private companies. And many local governments have
forced private companies to make large “donations” or pay arbitrarily imposed
fines to help cover the costs of social programs.
At his first news conference
as premier on Monday, Mr. Li delivered the most forceful statement by a Chinese
leader in years of the need to preserve the vitality of the private sector. He
promised a commercial environment “in which businesses of all forms of
ownership will be treated equally, protecting the property rights and interests
of entrepreneurs according to the law, encouraging fair competition between
business entities of all types.”
He offered no specifics
about reviving the economy. He cautioned that even China’s goal of 5 percent
growth this year, the lowest target in decades, would not be easy to achieve,
particularly when many other countries also face significant economic
challenges.
But he offset short-term
concerns about growth by making a case for China’s continued economic
strengths. “There is the massive scale of its market, its comprehensive array
of industries, abundant human resources and a robust base for development —
even more important, there are our clear institutional advantages,” he said,
apparently referring to Communist Party rule.
Mr. Li’s remarks triggered a
sharp jump on Monday morning in share prices in Hong Kong and a smaller but
notable increase in mainland China, even as markets elsewhere in Asia fell on
worries about government takeovers of two troubled banks
in the United States.
Mr. Li’s comments were
particularly noteworthy because he, unlike his predecessor, is seen as a close
ally of Mr. Xi, who has overseen the ever-expanding role of the Communist Party
in daily life and who has tended to emphasize security over economic growth.
Mr. Xi delivered brief
remarks before Mr. Li at the close of the nine-day annual session of China’s
largely ceremonial, Communist Party-controlled legislature, the National
People’s Congress. Mr. Xi did not mention the country’s economic challenges,
focusing to a considerable extent on the need for security and stability.
The difference in tone and
substance between the two men’s comments suggested that Mr. Xi would leave the
details of economic policy to the premier, while Mr. Xi would play the role of
the paternalistic Communist Party leader who provides security for the people
but is not directly responsible for the month-to-month vicissitudes of the
economy.
Many business leaders in
China have been worried as Mr. Xi’s emphasis on national security has been used
to justify greater party involvement in private companies’ affairs, as well as
strong pressure on businesses to cooperate with the military under a
“civil-military fusion” policy. But Mr. Xi repeated his case that emphasizing
national security was fully consistent with economic progress.
“Security is the foundation
of development, and stability is the precondition for strength and prosperity,”
Mr. Xi said.
Mr. Xi and Foreign Minister
Qin Gang both delivered strong criticisms of the United States early last week,
accusing it of seeking to contain China. But when asked on Monday about
Sino-American relations, Mr. Li steered clear of geopolitical issues and of any
direct criticism of the United States government, choosing instead to endorse
free trade and commercial cooperation.
“Opening up to the outside
is our fundamental national policy, and no matter how the international
situation changes, we will be unwavering in advancing it,” he said.
Mr. Li even suggested that
Mr. Xi and President Biden follow up on various understandings they reached
during a November meeting
in Bali, Indonesia, before the flight of a Chinese spy balloon
across the United States led once more to a souring of bilateral relations.
The premier’s news
conference with foreign and local journalists at the end of the annual
legislative session is presented as a demonstration of political
accountability. But the leadership screens questions beforehand, to ensure that
no topics that China’s leaders do not want to address publicly are raised.
China’s leaders took several
steps during the nine-day session to reassure businesses and investors. Mr. Xi,
who has sought to tighten the party’s grip over the economy and private
businesses, told business leaders that the party embraced private companies as
“one of us.”
In a move seen as signaling continuity, the party retained the leaders of the
central bank, the Ministry of Commerce and the Ministry of Finance, ending
weeks of speculation that Mr. Xi would replace them with a new and possibly
less experienced generation of economic policy managers.
“This raft of appointments
seems to at least partially buck the narrative that demonstrated fealty to Xi
Jinping will trump technocratic competence in assigning top-level government
positions,” said Eswar Prasad, a Cornell University
economist.
Some signs of economic
recovery have emerged. Surveys of purchasing managers suggest that factory
activity accelerated strongly
in February. In many Chinese cities, the subways,
airports and hotels are busy again.
But youth unemployment
remains high, and the housing market is in a slump. China’s factories, the
engine of its trade with the world, are facing weakening demand from the United
States and Europe.
Construction, another
mainstay of the Chinese economy, has slackened because of a slow-motion housing
market crash, and this in turn has hurt demand for steel, cement and other
materials. China plans to release on Wednesday a wide range of data on
industrial production, real estate development, retail sales and other economic
activity during January and February.