China stands a good chance of doubling the size of its economy by 2035 and surpassing the US as the world’s largest economy along the way, said an economist from the Bank of America.
As China seeks to become an advanced nation, Chinese President Xi Jinping said in November that it was possible to double the country’s gross domestic product and per capita income by 2035, CNBC reported.
Doubling of China’s GDP requires an average annual growth of 4.7% for the next 15 years, which some observers said may be hard to achieve. But Helen Qiao, the head of Asia economics at BofA Global Research, said some reform measures would help China get there.
“We think China would be able to achieve it,” she said.
In addition to doubling its GDP, the Asian economic giant would surpass the US as the world’s largest economy around 2027 to 2028, predicted Qiao.
China was one of the few economies globally that grew in 2020 despite the challenges posed by the Covid-19 pandemic. Official data showed the Chinese economy expanding by 2.3% last year, and the International Monetary Fund has forecast an 8.1% growth for China this year.
The US economy contracted by 3.5% in 2020, latest government estimates showed. The IMF said the US economy could grow by 5.1% this year.
In a report published earlier this month, Qiao addressed the common concerns that could hinder China from its 2035 economic goals. She listed three reasons that skeptics often cite: China’s aging population, high debt-to-GDP ratio and the country’s investment-led growth model.
According to the report, the latter is not sustainable and cannot drive growth over the longer term, hence those concerns will slow but not derail China’s overall growth trajectory.
That’s especially so because the government has some policies in place to address the challenges, the report said. Measures include those focused on stabilizing debt and initiatives to push for further urbanization and opening of the services sector.
Still, China’s journey to its 2035 goal is not risk-free, Qiao told CNBC. She said that even if China delivers on the reforms as promised, there are many factors that the country cannot control.
The economist cited further tensions between Washington and Beijing as a possible threat to China’s economic growth.
“Will that relationship remain sweet and ... peaceful? We’re not so sure,” she said.
US-China tensions escalated during former US president, Donald Trump’s term and became one of the largest threats to the global economy before the Covid-19 pandemic.
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