China's economic development belies prediction of doomsayers
IN THE CONTEXT of the trade frictions between China and the United States, the macroeconomic data for the first half of this year released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Monday, which showed China's economy is generally stable and making new progress in promoting high-quality development, has injected new confidence into the world economy. Zhong Sheng, a columnist for People's Daily, comments:
However, some in the US, fearful that people do not "misread" China's economic performance, once again enthusiastically claimed that the Chinese economy has slowed, and that US tariffs on China have had a major impact on many companies that want to leave China for "non-tariff" countries.
In stark contrast to this pessimistic tone, the rest of the international community has captured the key "stable" message from China's economic data. Against the backdrop of the global economic slowdown and facing headwinds from rising protectionism and multiple challenges brought by its own cyclical, systematic and structural factors, China has followed a proactive fiscal policy and prudent monetary policy, focusing on supply-side structural reform and adopting timely and more aggressive countercyclical measures such as tax cuts and fee reductions, which have kept key indexes such as economic growth, employment and prices within a normal range.