Chinese premier Li Keqiang admitted that the global pandemic has brought “an unprecedented impact” on the Chinese economy, during a July 13 speech at an economic seminar.
Difficulties
At a Monday seminar with Chinese economists and entrepreneurs in Beijing, Li said that the CCP virus epidemic and the global recession as a result of the pandemic has impacted China’s economy.“Uncertainty in the global environment is worsening, so our situation is still serious,” he said, according to the Chinese regime’s official report published on its website.
Li pointed out that the main challenge was unemployment. “We should continually prepare for a tough battle,” he said.
The seminar was attended by some of China’s biggest firms, such as Haier, the country’s largest home appliance manufacturer, and Pinduoduo, China’s largest interactive e-commerce platform, as well as top experts such as Ma Jun, chief economist at the research bureau of China’s central bank People’s Bank of China.
They discussed how “the difficulties and shock that the Chinese economy faces this year are extraordinary,” according to the official report.
Proposal
Li said that the government and companies should work on three things: employment, people’s livelihood, and the Chinese market.He especially noted that two groups of people, university graduates and migrant workers, desperately need jobs. He proposed that local authorities “implement differentiated taxation and financial support policies for labor-intensive firms, which can help them to hire more people.”
Conflicts
Since late May, Li has on several occasions highlighted the severity of China’s economic woes. But it appeared to conflict with Chinese leader Xi Jinping’s messaging.Li revealed that 600 million Chinese currently earn about 1,000 yuan ($140) per month, which is not enough to pay for monthly rent on a one-bedroom apartment in a mid-sized Chinese city.
His standard for the middle class was: an annual household income of 100,000 to 500,000 yuan ($14,160-$70,810). But in China, multi-generational households living under one roof are not uncommon.
Meanwhile, the Party’s official mouthpiece newspaper People’s Daily encouraged the 8.74 million students who graduated from university this month to go to rural areas for work opportunities.