Opinion | China’s economic grand plan falls short on how to enrich people and enlarge middle-income group
- Beijing laid out its 14th five-year plan and the 2035 Vision at the ‘two sessions’ meetings in Beijing
- But both contain assumptions that China is experiencing an unstoppable rise against the West, and that its consumers will create a domestic market big enough to guarantee its continued growth

Beijing’s grand plan for the next five years and its vision for 2035 have two big assumptions. One is that China is experiencing an unstoppable rise against the West, and the other is that China’s 1.4 billion consumers will create a domestic market big enough to guarantee the country’s continued growth.
To turn the second assumption into a reality, China needs to tilt its national income distribution in favour of the people. The 14th five-year plan and the 2035 Vision paint a rosy picture for the country’s future but include few details on what China will do to enrich the working class.
China’s policy proposals of boosting domestic demand are still based upon the conventional wisdom that Chinese households have saved too much and that the state has only to do a few tricks to convince them to loosen their purse strings
But it seems China’s policy proposals of boosting domestic demand are still based upon the conventional wisdom that Chinese households have saved too much and that the state has only to do a few tricks to convince them to loosen their purse strings.
But this notion may be wrong because China’s household savings at banks, which is often used as an indicator to show the country’s excessive savings, does not differentiate between rich and poor savers. More importantly, the debt level of Chinese households, particularly among younger generations, is already very high.
Beijing has pointed out the direction, but the path to that destination is still unclear
To be sure, the government’s plans do include a statement that China will enlarge its middle income group, but it is more of a wish than an action plan.