China's 'invest in people' slogan heralds economic strategy rethink

Beijing has introduced a new 'invest in people' slogan as part of its 15th five-year plan proposal, aiming to stimulate domestic demand by bolstering investments in welfare, pensions, education, and public services. Analysts view this as a rethink of economic strategy to address structural challenges like weak domestic demand and persistent deflationary pressures.

Beijing's recent policy meeting reaffirmed the 'invest in people' imperative, first raised in the Communist Party's October recommendations for the 15th five-year plan, which sets a goal of fostering the comprehensive development of the people. A readout from the meeting stated that the country must combine investment in physical assets with investment in people, while acknowledging structural economic challenges, including weak domestic demand and persistent deflationary pressure.

Tang Dajie, a senior researcher at the China Enterprise Institute think tank in Beijing, said the slogan reflects Beijing's focus on boosting consumption, as well as more holistic efforts to improve people's livelihoods. 'It started with addressing weak consumption but has evolved into full development for all people,' Tang said. 'If people are well taken care of, there will be no weak consumption. The only question is how to realise that.'

Analysts expect Beijing to strengthen investments in welfare, pensions, education, and other public services to unleash domestic demand potential. This shift is seen as a strategic pivot from traditional infrastructure spending toward human capital development, aimed at countering economic slowdown and enhancing long-term growth sustainability.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping called for breaking new ground in the high-quality development of China's service sector at a national conference held in Beijing from Tuesday to Wednesday. He underscored demand-driven development, reform breakthroughs, technology empowerment, and opening up. Premier Li Qiang and Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang addressed the meeting.

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China's State Council unveiled a blueprint on Tuesday aiming to grow its service sector to 100 trillion yuan (US$14.7 trillion) by 2030, fusing software and steel to modernise advanced manufacturing and avert deindustrialisation. The plan spotlights 'producer services' such as specialised logistics, information technology and advanced research. Analysts say it will cultivate world-class Chinese brands and shore up the industrial backbone.

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