China could tap 12 trillion yuan in new debt for stimulus in 2025, economist says
To ensure stimulus measures are long-lasting and effective, a Chinese economist said, speed and scale must be prioritised
New government debts to be raised next year – including treasury bonds, local special-purpose bonds and off-budget debt sales – could exceed 12 trillion yuan (US$1.67 trillion), said Zhang Bin, deputy director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
“In the past, every increase in aggregate demand was inseparable from an increase in government spending, because it is a fast variable that can quickly change the situation in the short term,” he said at an October 20 webinar organised by China Macroeconomy Forum.
Zhang, an advocate for aggressive interest rate cuts, was one of several economists who spoke at a symposium on May 23 in east China’s Shandong province with President Xi Jinping in attendance.
One reason for the lack of a hard figure could be the legal process of approval; any increases to the fiscal budget or bond quota require assent from the National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislature.