This week’s meeting of the World Economic Forum in the port city of Tianjin – known colloquially as the Summer Davos – is the first of its kind after a three-year hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. It will last until Thursday.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in January described the EU’s approach to China as “de-risking rather than decoupling” since the bloc still sought to work and trade with Beijing.
And President Joe Biden has kept former leader Donald Trump’s hard line on China, and in some areas gone further, including banning exports of high-end semiconductors to the rising power.
Responding to Beijing’s heated criticism of the move, Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Beijing last week insisted that the United States was not seeking “economic containment” of China.
“But at the same time,” he said, “it’s not in our interest to provide technology to China that could be used against us.”
5% GROWTH TARGET
China is on course to achieve its five per cent target for economic growth in 2023 set by Beijing earlier this year, Li also told the audience at the forum, which is being attended by leaders from New Zealand, Mongolia, Vietnam and Barbados, as well as a large delegation from Saudi Arabia.
“For the whole year, we are expected to achieve the target of about five per cent economic growth set at the beginning of this year,” Li said.
“We are fully confident and capable of pushing ahead the steady and long-term development of China’s economy on the track of high-quality development in the relative long term.”
China is grappling with a slowing post-COVID recovery, with a number of lacklustre indicators in recent weeks signalling the rebound is running out of steam.
Beijing’s central bank last week cut two key interest rates in a bid to counter the slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy.
And reports this month have suggested Beijing is lining up a tranche of measures targeting multiple areas of the economy, particularly the real estate sector, which makes up a huge portion of gross domestic product.
Beijing set an economic growth target of “around five per cent” in March, one of its lowest in decades as it emerged from strict zero-Covid rules that hammered business activity.
Premier Li at the time said the target would be “no easy task”.