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China says economy, unemployment great concerns ahead annual moot

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AFP
AFP
Agence France-Presse

BEIJING: China’s leadership has “amble confidence” that the country’s economy will rebound, a spokesperson for its parliament said Monday ahead of a key political meeting in Beijing.

“The underlying trend of a rebound in the economy and long-term growth remains unchanged,” Lou Qinjian told a press conference, adding: “We have ample confidence on that.”

China’s annual political conclave kicks off in Beijing on Monday, with officials saying the flagging economy and youth unemployment are of “great concern” as they lay out plans for the coming year.

Armed police and public security workers are ubiquitous on Beijing streets as thousands of delegates arrive for the beginning of the annual “Two Sessions” gatherings.

Proceedings kick off Monday at 3:00 pm (0700 GMT) with the opening ceremony of China’s People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) — attended by President Xi Jinping and other party top brass — which will last until Sunday March 10.

At a press conference, CPPCC spokesperson Liu Jieyi said that “economic topics are of great concern” to the body’s over two thousand members.

So, too, he said Sunday, was “the employment of young people, especially fresh graduates”, with youth unemployment officially at around 15 percent at the end of 2023, after the statistics bureau adjusted its calculation methods.

Monday’s CPPCC is relatively low-stakes compared to the near-simultaneous gathering of the country’s legislature, the National People’s Congress.

The NPC begins on Tuesday and runs until March 11, spokesperson Lou Qinjian told a press conference on Monday.

The meetings are not expected to see the unveiling of big-ticket bailouts that experts say are needed to stimulate China’s economy, which last year posted some of its lowest growth in decades.

China is instead set to double down on national security, with analysts expecting it to increase its military budget, second only to the United States.

Beijing revised a law dramatically expanding its definition of espionage last year and conducted raids on a string of big-name consulting, research and due diligence firms.

The legislature’s top body also approved a broad and vaguely worded revision to the country’s state secrets law in the run-up to the NPC.

“There will also be continued emphasis on security,” Lynette Ong, a professor at the University of Toronto, told AFP.

“I don’t expect any major policy change such as important structural reforms that will change the course of economic trajectory,” she added.

On paper, the NPC wields little actual power.

All major decisions will have been made weeks before in closed-door meetings of the Communist Party, far from the international media’s cameras.

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