China’s Premier Holds Meeting With Experts to Save Economy; Analysts Say Root Cause Systemic With Communism

While Chinese communist regime’s Premier Li Qiang held a meeting with mainland Chinese economists on July 6 to collect suggestions on how to save the mainland Chinese economy, analysts say the root cause of China’s economic downturn lies in its political system, which is dictated by the ruling communist party (CCP) which is currently led by Xi Jinping.

According to analysts, with the multiple crises currently looming over China’s economy and the ongoing divergence with the West, there is no solution for the CCP.

Mr. Li hosted the expert symposium on the economic situation with regime Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang and eight scholars from China’s finance, political economic, and banking institutions.

During the meeting, Mr. Li first touted that under the leadership of Mr. Xi, “the economy has shown a positive trend of recovery.” He then blamed foreign countries for China’s economic problems, saying “the world’s political and economic situation is complicated and has brought many impacts on our country’s development,” reported Chinese state media.

Mr. Li also said that he hoped that experts and scholars would provide more constructive suggestions on Chinese economy.

Zheng Xuguang, an independent political economic scholar and host of the talk show “Xuguang Times Commentary,” told The Epoch Times on July 7 that Mr. Li is mainly looking for some pro-CCP scholars to help unify thoughts in academia. “Xi Jinping is the one who really decides things, and he only cares about political stability,” Mr. Zheng said.

“The current economic problems are actually rooted in politics, and he [Li] can’t touch the political issues. He sent a message to the academic field: ‘You should put forward more constructive suggestions, which is to help the regime and not to make trouble,’” Mr. Zheng added.

Economic Downturn Continues

Taiwanese financial expert Edward Huang told The Epoch Times on July 6 that Mr. Li hosted the economic symposium mainly because the Chinese and Hong Kong stock markets recently have been plummeting, and the RMB is also depreciating. Industry is quite pessimistic about China’s economy.

Liu Yuanchun, president of Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, published the “2023 China Macroeconomic Analysis and Forecast Report” in June, which laid out the “five 20 percent” issues facing China’s economy. They are a youth unemployment rate exceeding 20 percent, declining year-on-year profits of China’s industrial enterprises by more than 20 percent, local government land transfer revenue falling by 20 percent, new real estate construction by area falling by 20 percent, and the consumer confidence index gap being as high as 20 percent.

People attending a job fair in Beijing on Aug. 26, 2022. (JADE GAO/AFP via Getty Images)

Liu Xiaoguang, co-author of the report and a professor at the Institute of Development and Strategy of Renmin University of China, said that these “five 20 percent” phenomena are extremely abnormal, indicating that the pressure in China’s related fields has move passed the point of self-recovery. It’s not only difficult to expect any automatic economic recovery; furthermore, it will form a vicious circle in certain economic sectors, Mr. Liu wrote.

Mr. Li pointed out at the symposium that it is necessary for all sectors of Chinese society to pay attention to putting out policies focused on stabilizing growth, employment, and preventing risks, and to promptly introduce and implement a series of targeted, combined, and coordinated policies.

Mr. Huang said in response to the premier’s remarks, “China’s economy is not decided by policies at present. No matter how many meetings they are holding, it will be useless. Mr. Li talks about combined policies, but there are no specific things in it. So far, we haven’t seen any policy that can change status quo.”

Mr. Huang believes that Premier Li cannot make decisions that tackle the economy’s real underlying problems, such as the values conflict between China and the United States, or the CCP’s state institutions advancing while China’s private sectors retreat, which he believes are the root cause of current China’s economic downturn.

“It’s something only Xi Jinping can decide, and there is nothing others can do if Xi doesn’t do anything about it,” Mr. Huang said.

“China’s stock market this year is quite bad. The RMB is still depreciating. The Hong Kong stock market has fallen very heavily in the past few days, showing that the entire market’s confidence in the Chinese economy is quite fragile. Li Qiang doesn’t have the ability to reverse the situation,” Huang said.

“China’s domestic demand and the real estate market have continued to decline. Li Qiang has not made any achievements since he took office as premier, and the economy continues slipping downward.”

US-Sino Relations Affect Chinese Economy

Wu Jialong, a macroeconomist in Taiwan, believes that the current problem ailing China’s economy is the simultaneous outbreak of multiple crises.

“I compare it to multiple organ failure,” he said.

Mr. Wu told The Epoch Times on July 7, “The root cause of China’s employment crisis is in exports and manufacturing, because orders have been pulled away from China and foreign investment has withdrawn.

Mr. Wu agreed with Mr. Zheng that the root of China’s economic problems also lies in politics.

“If tracing further, it’s because the relationship between the United States and China has been worsening. So the root cause is politics, not in the economy. So when they seek advice from economic experts, what they can get is limited.”

“Because Xi Jinping decides the major policies, which is to challenge the United States, competing with the United States for leadership of the world or hegemony, as a result, the United States has counterattacked. Moreover, China’s domestic demand is not enough to absorb the vacated production capacity of the export sector. The current economic problems are not easy to deal with.”

He added that there’s no solution to China’s economic problems even if Xi steps down, as it’s structural to the CCP.

Cargo containers are stacked at Yantian port in Shenzhen in China’s southern Guangdong Province on June 21, 2021. (STR/AFP via Getty Images)

Mr. Wu said that the United States has taken serious measures to counter the CCP’s unfair economic practices. “And then they sent a ministerial official [Yellen] to visit China. This means having a dialogue while continuing the confrontation. The United States has no intention of reaching an agreement with the CCP at all. It’s just to show a consensus that we are having a dialogue and will continue the discussion next time, which is negotiation without agreement.”

Ning Haizhong and Yi Ru contributed to this report.

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