Fiscal strains from a five-year property market slump are forcing Chinese provinces to cut their 2026 budget-revenue expectations. Analysts cite the shift as a warning sign that intense debt pressures continue to drag down the nation’s economic growth outlook. Local governments are seen curbing infrastructure spending to prioritise debt control over rapid expansion.
Fiscal strains are forcing Chinese provinces to slash their budget-revenue expectations for 2026 due to the knock-on effects of a five-year property market slump. Analysts cite the shift as a warning sign that intense debt pressures continue to drag down the nation’s economic growth outlook.
Major provinces are budgeting for 2 to 3 per cent growth this year in general public operating revenue, broadly in line with last year but below broader economic growth targets, Fitch Ratings said in a research note on Wednesday. It pointed to “subdued revenue momentum” and flagged debt-repayment risks.
“We believe local governments will prioritise debt control rather than pursue rapid expansion in infrastructure investment to prop up growth,” Fitch wrote, citing data from 23 Chinese provinces, regions and municipalities.
Low property values were expected to keep local investments in check. “A sustained rebound in land purchases is unlikely in the near term, keeping [local government] capital revenue weak or flat in many provinces and constraining government-fund spending growth,” the credit rating agency said. “Operating spending discipline is also likely to persist, despite the Ministry of Finance’s indications that fiscal spending would be increased in 2026. We expect modest expenditure growth for [local government’s] general public budgets.”
This move aligns with Beijing’s fiscal discipline, pushing regions to prioritise social services and tech over large projects, as local governments curb infrastructure spending.