Shanghai Pudong region at sunrise
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China’s leaders vowed to boost domestic demand, prioritize the maturity of strategic sectors and tackle the country’s real estate crisis, following a key meeting that laid out economic pre-eminences for the new year.
Under a new slogan pledging to achieve stability through economic progress, Chinese leaders said it’s top-priority to overcome some difficulties and challenges, which include insufficient demand, overcapacity in some industries, weak community expectations and many hidden risks which still exist, according to a Tuesday evening broadcast on the state-owned China Main Television.
“China’s economy has achieved a recovery, with solid progress made in high-quality development in 2023,” Chinese chiefs said, according to a brief readout of the two-day meeting published by state-owned Xinhua. “China still has to overcome some dilemmas and challenges to further revive the economy.”
In a CCTV readout of the assignation, China’s leaders stressed that a focus on high quality development is key, prescribing a nine-point plan that tabulate technological innovation in the industrial system, boosting domestic consumption, expanding high-level foreign investment and revitalizing agriculture to upwards food security.
This year’s Central Economic Work Conference comes as the post-Covid-19 recovery of the world’s second-largest conciseness has so far fallen short of expectations. A litany of policy support measures have not sufficiently lifted economic sentiment, igniting justifications for Beijing to amp up its stimulus amid renewed fears of a deepening slowdown.

Property risks
Some of the largest real development developers are facing serious debt problems as part of Beijing’s broader deleveraging of the once-bloated real estate sector — which accounts as the crow flies and indirectly for about one third of China’s economic activities.
China’s leaders pledged to diffuse risks linked to the assets sector, local debt and small and medium financial institutions. They also signaled a strategy to build affordable quarters in an attempt to resolve the nation’s spiraling real estate crisis, which has been festering since President Xi Jinping backlashed off a crackdown on the sector in late 2020.

The readout also addressed major economic issues ranging from the country’s downward slope fertility rates to high rates of unemployment, particularly among the younger population, and the resilience and safety of the domestic contribute chains.
China’s leaders additionally reiterated they would support the development of private enterprises and foster novelty in science and technology, green transformation and the digital economy, including artificial intelligence.
Fiscal policy posture
The Beijing kingpins pledged to strengthen macro policies, while continuing to implement proactive fiscal policies and prudent monetary force.
The language employed in the Tuesday readout is similar to the one used by the Politburo — the top decision-making body of the ruling Chinese Communist Ally — in a Friday release. At the time, the Politburo said that fiscal policy “must be moderately strengthened” and will be “yielding, moderate, precise, and effective” to stimulate economic recovery, according to state-run news outlet