办好自己的事

  • https://macropolo.org/the-post…igm-analyzing-china/?rp=e


    The Post-Target Paradigm: Analyzing China Just Got Harder but More Interesting





    The just released 14th Five-Year Plan (FYP) and 2035 long-range vision is some 75,000 words long. But it is short on concrete targets. For the first time in 35 years, the biggest news that came out of the 14th FYP was what was missing: the GDP target.

    It wasn’t just the GDP target either. Almost all socioeconomic indicators in the FYP became relatively modest “soft targets”—meaning there’s no political mandate to meet them. Even though Beijing will likely still determine general economic targets based on annual conditions, the reality is that the Xi Jinping era has ushered in the post-target era.

    That might seem unexpected, but we have been making the case for the downgrading of targets. The irony, though, is that this uncharted target-less terrain can be more vexing than the prevailing target-rich environment.

    Indeed, despite regular criticism lodged at China’s obsession with targets, their sudden demotion and even absence can be discombobulating. This is particularly so for the humble analyst who has long relied on them as an anchor by which to assess China’s goals and ambitions.

    But worry not. Rather than wandering aimlessly down Beijing hutongs in search of targets, we think it is now more important and productive to look at systemic and qualitative changes to gauge China’s progress. For the next five years at least, targets will simply be peripheral, while reshaping institutions and incentives will likely take center stage.

    From Targets to the “Two Is”

    To understand this shift, it is important to first grasp how Beijing arrived at this point. Targets of all stripes have long held an exalted place in Chinese policymaking. The GDP target, in particular, was a direct and simple key performance indicator (KPI) for local officials. But over the decades, the singular fixation on this KPI massively distorted incentives across local economies.

    For one, intrepid and competitive officials found creative ways to “meet” the target, chief among them manipulating local economic statistics. By MacroPolo’s counting, in the past five years, seven provinces have been caught overstating their GDP by 10 percent or more.

    It also mattered less whether that growth was virtuous or unsustainable, so long as it hit the KPI. For instance, debt-fueled investments and discounting environmental costs were tolerated because the headline target was met or exceeded. Even when Beijing’s objectives shifted to prioritize the environment or deleveraging, the grip of targets was so strong that local officials simply found loopholes or continued fabricating data to meet a new set of targets. Overreliance on targets, then, diverted local officials’ focus on meeting real objectives.

    Perhaps the most pernicious effect of the target was embedding short-termism in local government behavior. Much like how a publicly listed corporation often forfeits long-term objectives in order to meet quarterly revenue targets and shareholder expectations, local governments behaved in much the same way. They consistently tried to meet short-term growth at the expense of addressing longer–term weaknesses.

    But Xi has made it rather clear that he doesn’t intend to run China like a corporation, instead preoccupying his first two terms with imposing longer-term thinking—for example by consistently touting the “two centenary goals.”

    Deemphasizing targets can be interpreted as essentially a “whole-of-economy” effort to dislodge short-termism, paving the way toward a new paradigm that focuses more on the “two Is”: incentives and institutions.

    In fact, Xi admitted as much in a public speech on science and technology. He highlighted the need to overcome institutional barriers to innovation rather than simply increasing spending on research and development (R&D) to produce the desired results.

    With China’s ballyhooed turn toward more technology independence, it would make sense for Beijing to pour money into R&D. Yet surprisingly, the R&D spending growth target of 8% in the 14th FYP is actually two percentage points lower than the real growth of R&D expenditure (10% after inflation) during the past five years.

    It isn’t for the lack of money. China’s total spending of $23 billion on basic research is less than the annual budget of the US National Institutes of Health. With an annual fiscal budget of more than $3 trillion, Beijing can easily double or triple the spending on basic research. Yet it has opted not to do so.

    This newfound modesty, not just for R&D but also in other areas like energy and urbanization, further reinforces the shift away from targets and reflects the priority of fixing institutions, untangling distortions, and taming vested interests before throwing money at problems.

    In many ways, the current set of targets no longer serves China’s economy today and where it wants to be by 2035. To the extent that some targets still exist, they will mainly function as a floor. It is a recognition that targets won’t solve structural issues that are institutional in nature and difficult to measure.

    As the new post-target paradigm takes root, analyzing China will need to adapt accordingly.

    It will certainly be more demanding, but also more intellectually interesting to evolve existing mental models of the Chinese political economy.

  • https://macropolo.org/china-fyp-adjusts-course/?rp=m


    Yes, China Will Adjust Course

    As the world fixated on the US presidential election on November 3, China dropped its 14th Five-Year Plan (FYP) on the same day, all but ensuring that virtually no attention was paid to it.

    Those who did pay attention mainly focused on the “dual circulation” concept. But equal attention should be devoted to the one refrain that continues to stand out among the flurry of official explainers and documents centered on the 14th FYP: “getting China’s own house in order (办好自己的事)”.

    External environment

    That mantra not only reflects a redoubling on domestic priorities, it also telegraphs Beijing’s discernible concern over the external environment. In fact, MacroPolo’s recent 2025 Forecast noted that a key factor that will drive Beijing’s behavior will be the fact that it “faces its toughest external environment in about a generation…[and] likely can no longer count on a relatively stable external environment.”


    The Chinese Communist Party seems to hold a similar assessment. Take, for example, its own 2×2 “SWOT” breakdown (see Table).

    Source: People’s Daily CCP microsite.

    Most of the “opportunity” column are pablum on general secular trends, not actual opportunities. But the single “external threat” specified is the bleaker external environment, which would explain the inclusion of “to proactively build a more favorable external environment” in the 14th FYP opinion, a provision that was not in the 13th FYP. In CCP speak, this is probably about as explicit an admission as we’ll get on the need to stabilize relations with major economies.

    Growth target

    Omission is just as important as inclusion in such plans to gauge the balance between continuity and change. Among the litany of longstanding problems on the domestic front, what’s notable is the notable absence of an implied growth target. In contrast to the 13th FYP opinion that included “doubling GDP in 2020 from the 2010 level,” which meant maintaining a specific growth target, the 14th FYP opinion simply states “achieving new results in economic development…”

    Of particular interest is Xi Jinping’s official explainer on the growth target. He acknowledged that internally many had suggested including a specific target for the next five years. But rather than focusing on a target, the Central Committee decided that importance should be placed on structural adjustment, quality, and efficiency.

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    It appears that Xi may have vetoed the inclusion of a target in order to set different expectations on the Chinese economy and send a strong political message on what the real focus should be. At this point, even if a concrete growth target is ultimately included in the full plan in March 2021, it will likely be the least important it has been in decades.

    A deemphasis on the growth target is a significant leading indicator of adjustment, and that adjustment is made all the more pressing because of the CCP’s assessment of the external environment. In the first ever post-Plenum press conference by the CCP Central Committee, it emphasized that adjustments are needed to realize its 2035 vision. And in the usual op-eds that follow these confabs, the CCP has argued that even the “four comprehensives” strategy is not fixed in stone but need to be altered accordingly as the goal post changes.

    All of this points to a CCP that appears to be taking pains to rationalize the need for course adjustment, because ending the era of business–as–usual is not an easy pill to swallow. Adjustment in this case will touch the third rail of reforms such as income redistribution and entrenched state monopolies, among others, which have long lagged precisely because they are so difficult and politically charged.

    Beijing exuded confidence in its 2035 vision of creating a large middle class and reaching high-income status, but the tone of the 14th FYP is different. It was less a litany of “what needs to be done” and more of a call to action to execute on long overdue and difficult structural adjustments.

    Its latest best-laid plan is a more sober recognition of the reality that China will no longer count on growth to bail it out. Without tackling the accumulated problems and bottlenecks in the political economy, Beijing’s 15-year vision will largely dwell in the realm of aspiration.


  • https://www.washingtonpost.com…eport-cant-be-final-word/



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  • fin-du-jeu

    Changed the title of the thread from “办好自己的事)” to “办好自己的事”.
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