China sees 5 percent increase despite trade war

China set an annual development target of about five percent on Wednesday, which was a growing trade war with an United States exports to increase domestic demand as its main economic driver.

Beijing also announced a rare increase in fiscal funding, allowing the lack of its budget to reach four percent this year as it fights for employment, stubbornly low consumer demand and constant property sector debt crisis for young people.

The headline growth figure announced by Premier Lee Kiang at an annual Communist Party Conclave was roughly in line with the AFP survey of analysts, although experts say it is ambitious given the scale of the country’s economic challenges.

Under the schemes, some 12 million new jobs will be created in Chinese cities as Beijing pushes two percent of inflation this year.

A government work report vowed to make domestic demand “main engine and anchor”, saying that Beijing should move fast to address “insufficient domestic demand, especially insufficient consumption”.

And in a rare step, Lee said that China would increase its fiscal deficit to a percentage point, something that analysts have said that will give Beijing more latitudes to deal with their economic recession.

Dylan Loh, an assistant professor at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, said the development target of Beijing would be “tough but possible”.

He said that low consumption was a “issue of confidence”, saying that “if people are, they are concerned about spending-especially large-ticut items-it is very difficult to address it”.

US President Donald Trump traded in the Major Asian markets on Wednesday, reversing his loss one day after proceeding with more blanket tariffs on Chinese imports after a similar step last month.

The American tariff is expected to hit hundreds of billions of dollars in total trade between the world’s two largest economies.

“Internationally, unseen changes in a century are coming out at a fast pace worldwide,” the government work report states.

“Unilateralism and protectionism is increasing,” it was warned.

“Domesticly, the foundation for China’s continuous economic reform and development is not strong enough,” the report said.

Fighting till the end ‘

Chinese exports reached record level last year.

But as thousands of delegates gathered in a luxurious hall of the people of Beijing for the initial session of the National People’s Congress, this week, the second of China’s “two sessions” political meetings, a wide trade war under Trump was cloudy.

Beijing on Tuesday announced its own measures in vengeance for Washington’s latest tariff hike – and swear that it would fight a business war for “bitter end”.

The move will see that China will implement a levy of up to 15 percent on a series of US agricultural products, including soybeans, pork and wheat starting from the beginning of next week.

Beijing’s counselor represents a “relatively silent response” compared to the all-frosting tariffs of Trump, Lynn Song, the chief economist for Greater China.

He said, “Vengeal could have been very strong, and risks with every moving are also growing for a strong response,” he said.

Analysts say that officials may announce further plans this week to promote the economy – adding a string of aggressive support measures announced at the end of last year.

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In addition, on Wednesday, China revealed a 7.2 percent increase in defense spending in 2025, as Beijing rapidly modernizes its armed forces in front of regional tension and strategic competition with the US.

Analysts say that geopolitical tension between Beijing and Washington is ready to intensify this year.

The position of the self-educated Taiwan is claimed among the sources of Bhaghana, claimed by China as part of its sovereign region.

Defense expenses will finance frequent removal of military aircraft around Taiwan in Beijing, which aims to pressurize authorities in the Democratic Island.

Trump also came even after proposing a coordinated order of the United States, Russia and China’s military budget.

China has not agreed to such a step, the Foreign Ministry spokesperson suggested last month that Washington should first operate any reduction in military expenditure.

(This story is not edited by NDTV employees and auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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