The International Monetary Fund has upgraded its forecast for China's economy, while warning that reforms are needed to sustain growth
The International Monetary Fund has upgraded its forecast for China’s economy, while warning that consumer-friendly reforms are needed to sustain strong, high-quality growth.
The IMF's report, issued late Tuesday, said the world's second-largest economy will likely expand at a 5% annual rate this year, based on its growth in the first quarter and recent moves to support the property sector. That is a 0.4 percentage point above its earlier estimate.
But it warned that attaining sustained growth requires building stronger social safety nets and increasing workers' incomes to enable Chinese consumers to spend more.
The IMF also said Beijing should scale back subsidies and other “distortive” policies that support manufacturing at the expense of other industries such as services.
The ruling Communist Party has set its annual growth target at “around 5%,” and the economy grew at a faster-than-expected 5.3% in the first quarter of the year, boosting the global economy.
The IMF said its upgraded forecast also reflects recent moves to boost growth, including fresh help for the property industry such as lower interest rates and smaller down-payment requirements on home loans.
But it said risks remained, with growth in 2025 forecast to be 4.5%, also up 0.4% from an earlier forecast.
The IMF praised the Chinese government's focus on what it calls “high quality” growth, including increased investment in clean energy and advanced technology and improved regulation of financial industries.
But it added that “a more comprehensive and balanced policy approach would help China navigate the headwinds
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