BEIJING: China has cut its growth target this year as the world’s second-largest economy pushes through painful reforms to address a rapid build-up in debt and erects a “firewall” against financial risks.
China aims to expand its economy by around 6.5 percent, Premier Li Keqiang said in his work report at the opening of the annual meeting of Parliament on Sunday. The target is realistic and will help steer and steady expectations, Li said.
China set a target of 6.5 to 7 percent last year and ultimately achieved 6.7 percent growth, supported by record bank loans, a speculative housing boom and billions in government investment.
But as the government moves to cool the housing market, slow new credit and tighten its purse strings, China will have to depend more on domestic consumption and private investment for growth. As in 2016, China did not set a target for exports, underlining the uncertain global outlook.
“The developments both in and outside of China require that we are ready to face more complicated and graver situations,” Li said, adding that world growth remained sluggish, while deglobalization and protectionism were gathering pace.
Growth of around 6.5 percent is sufficient to safeguard employment, said Huang Shouhong, director of the State Council Research Office, who helped craft the premier’s work report.
China added 13.14 million new urban jobs in 2016, with the number of college graduates finding employment or starting businesses reaching another record, according to Li’s report.
“As for whether there is a bottom line on growth, as long as there are no problems in employment, growth slightly higher or lower is acceptable,” Huang said.
Michael Tien, a Hong Kong delegate to China’s Parliament and founder of clothing chain G2000, said he was surprised by the 6.5 percent figure.
“I think it is very high,” he told Reuters. “In the past few years, whatever number they come up with, they will always meet it and they will always exceed it a little bit. So with this economy, 6.5 (percent) is mind-boggling.”
Economists say it is a delicate balancing act to support growth and maintain liquidity while pursuing reforms and taming unruly financial forces.
The 2017 target for broad money supply growth was cut slightly to around 12 percent from about 13 percent for 2016. The government’s budget deficit target was kept unchanged at 3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).
Li said China would continue to implement a proactive fiscal policy, adding that government aimed to cut companies’ tax burden by about 350 billion yuan ($51 billion) this year.
China will also maintain a prudent and neutral monetary policy, he said. Beijing has flagged in recent months a gradual shift away from a loose monetary stance to discourage speculative investments. Since February, the central bank has raised by tiny increments the interest rates on some lending facilities.
China will also press on with asset securitization and debt-to-equity swaps this year.
China will push forward with reform of state-owned firms and assets this year, Li said.
Ownership reforms at more than 100 central government-run enterprises will be completed by year-end as part of efforts to use private capital to revive its lumbering state sector, state media reported last month.
China is also looking to shutter more “zombie” enterprises, a term loosely used to describe inefficient firms with surplus capacity.
The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said in a work report released on Sunday that it would shut or stop construction of coal-fired power plants with capacity of more than 50 million kilowatts.
China will also cut steel capacity and coal output this year, the economic planner said.
Fixed-asset investment is expected to rise about 9 percent in 2017, down from last year’s target of 10.5 percent.
“As overcapacity is cut, we must provide assistance to laid-off workers,” Li said.
China aims to create more than 11 million new urban jobs this year, even as employment pressure grows.
“This year’s target for urban job creation is 1 million more than last year, underlining the greater importance we are attaching to employment,” Li said.
China cuts growth goal, puts focus on reform
China cuts growth goal, puts focus on reform
Qatar wealth fund plans to invest in 5 new VC funds
DOHA: Qatar Investment Authority plans to invest in five new venture capital funds as part of an expanded $3 billion venture capital program, the sovereign wealth fund said on Monday.
The new funds, called Greycroft, Ion Pacific, Liberty City Ventures, Shorooq and Speedinvest, are set to open offices in Doha in an effort to develop Qatar as a venture capital hub, it said in a statement.
The “Fund of Funds” initiative was unveiled in 2024 to attract venture capital firms to Qatar, build a robust environment for entrepreneurs and help diversify its economy away from fossil fuel revenues, as the country follows the path of other wealthy Gulf peers.
Qatar’s prime minister on Sunday announced an expansion of the fund to reach up to $3 billion.
“This year, we move from momentum to scale,” Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said as he opened the Qatar edition of the Web Summit technology conference.
The expansion would potentially target investments besides series A and B funding rounds.
“We are now expanding the scope to do later rounds, so that may open up conversations with a different set of managers,” said Mohsin Pirzada, the head of funds at QIA, in an interview with Reuters.
“We will continue to be quite flexible and support earlier stages as well, but there are sufficient pools of capital within the country to go after those types of opportunities,” he said, citing credit lending facilities.
The QIA has assets under management worth $580 billion, according to Global SWF, a sovereign wealth fund tracker, and late last year it launched its own AI-focused company Qai as it bets on the booming sector to drive economic diversification.
As part of its efforts, the country has launched a pilot computing credit program that provides free computing for startups that are based in Doha, which could be applicable to managers that are part of the Fund of Funds scheme.
The pilot program is going to be “a big differentiator in terms of what our program is offering vis-a-vis our peers in the region,” Pirzada said.









