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China unveils 5-year plan’s support for private sector, strengthening financial power

Revelations had not been mentioned in the communique issued last week following the fourth plenum

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China has vowed to “fully stimulate” the vitality of all types of business entities and encourage the joint development of various forms of ownership. Photo: Getty Images
Xiaofei Xuin Paris

The Central Committee of China's ruling Communist Party has officially announced its proposals for the country's 15th five-year plan, including language that signals strategic support for the private sector and an accelerated transformation into a financial power, easing market concerns about their positions in the economy over the next five years.

These messages were not mentioned in the communique published last week at the end of the committee's fourth plenum.
“The state should implement the Private Economy Promotion Law to ensure, through legal and institutional means, equal access to production factors, fair participation in market competition and effective protection of legitimate rights and interests, so as to develop and expand the private economy,” the proposal document said.
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New phrase, new phase? China’s central bank adjusts language on yuan internationalisation

Beijing now states plainly that it aims to ‘promote the internationalisation of the yuan’ amid growing doubts over the US dollar

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China appears to be stepping up efforts to promote the international use of its currency amid rising tensions with the United States. Photo: Shutterstock

China’s central bank has adopted a more proactive tone when describing its efforts to promote the global use of the yuan – a rhetorical change that could signal increased efforts to internationalise the currency amid growing concerns over the US dollar.

At a recent meeting, People’s Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng pledged to “promote the internationalisation of the yuan”, a noticeable shift in tone from earlier statements by central bank officials, which typically referred to “prudently and steadily advancing the yuan’s internationalisation”.

The bank would “promote the yuan’s internationalisation, boost its use in trade, further open up financial markets in a gradual and orderly way, and support the growth of offshore yuan markets”, Pan said during a meeting of the central bank’s Communist Party committee on Friday.

The change in wording by the central bank followed last week’s fourth plenum of the party’s Central Committee, where China’s leaders unveiled their policy priorities for the next five years.

Since late 2020, the People’s Bank of China had previously tended to describe its approach using the phrase: “prudently and steadily advancing the yuan’s internationalisation”.

Ding Shuang, chief economist for Greater China and North Asia at Standard Chartered, said the use of the new phrase was a signal from Beijing that it would become more active in promoting the global use of the yuan over the next five years.

“It doesn’t mean a radical shift,” Ding said. “The People’s Bank of China is likely to do more foundational work, such as improving the infrastructure and facilitating the yuan’s use in trade and investment to make it easier for overseas investors to hold the currency.”

Ding pointed to Beijing’s recent move to further open up the country’s bond market by making it easier for foreign investors to conduct repo transactions as an example of the type of measures Chinese authorities may introduce.

They could also move towards opening up the country’s capital account in the future if conditions allowed, he added.

China has long sought to turn the yuan into a global currency, and those efforts have appeared to many observers to gain greater urgency in recent months as Beijing looks to hedge against the risk of US financial sanctions and turbulence in the dollar-based financial system.

The yuan was the sixth most popular currency used in cross-border transactions via the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (Swift) payment system in September, according to the latest Swift data.

The Chinese currency accounted for 3.17 per cent of global payments in value terms in September, up from 2.93 per cent the previous month, the data showed.

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Alice Li
Alice Li
Alice joined the Post in November 2024 and covers China's economy. She holds a master's degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong. She was previously a summer intern at the Post and has had internship experience with both Chinese and foreign news outlets.
Sylvia Ma
Sylvia Ma
Sylvia Ma joined the Post in 2023 and covers China economy. She holds a master’s degree in journalism from the University of Hong Kong and a bachelor’s degree in English from Fudan University.
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