KEY POINTS
  • Beijing set its annual growth target at "around 5%" this year, while also sticking to a deficit-to-GDP ratio of 3% for the year.
  • A high base effect suggests the growth target will prove difficult to attain, given China's economy is plagued by a series of afflictions from overcapacity to a festering real estate and debt crisis.
  • Wang Dan, economist at Hang Seng Bank (China), expects "some kind of a project that is in similar size and quality of the Three Gorges Dam to really pull up domestic demand" so Beijing may be able to meet its ambitious growth target this year.
A Chinese flag flies high over The Bund.

China wants to unleash a "new leap forward" with "new productive forces" — but President Xi Jinping may need to resort to an old tactic to hit the country's ambitious growth target this year, one economist warns.

Beijing set its annual growth target at "around 5%" this year in the government's annual work report released on Tuesday, sticking to a deficit-to-gross domestic product ratio of 3% for 2024 — down from a rare upward revision to 3.8% late last year.