Chinese Economy under the New "Dual Circulation" Strategy: Challenges and Opportunities—A Summary of the Annual SUFE Macroeconomic Report (2020–2021)

Kevin X.D. Huang a, Shuangjian Li b , Guoqiang Tian c

Author information


a Department of Economics, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37235, USA

b Institute for Advanced Research, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, Shanghai 200433, China

c Institute for Advanced Research, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, Shanghai 200433, China; Department of Economics, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843, USA

E-mail: kevin.huang@vanderbilt.edu (Kevin X.D. Huang), li.shuangjian@mail.shufe.edu.cn (Shuangjian Li), gtian@tamu.edu (Guoqiang Tian)


Abstract


Entering year 2020, the Chinese economy was struck by the COVID-19 outbreak. The unprecedented pandemic, entangled with the already elevated complexities in the nations internal environment and external surroundings, aggravated its economic outlook. Internal factors including severe education mismatch in Chinas labor force, its vanishing demographic dividend, the declined purchasing power of its middle-income groups, risen leverage ratio of households and enterprises, and soared local government debt reinforced to weaken Chinas domestic demand. External factors, especially uncertainty in the China-US relation in the face of the re-shaping global value chain, dragged world economic recovery and thus Chinas exports and imports. This summary report highlights some major challenges and opportunities faced by the nation under its new development strategy that stresses internal circulation of domestic economy aided by its interaction with the globe. Our analyses based on IAR-CMM model provide a unified framework for addressing Chinas short-, medium-, and long-term issues in an internally coherent manner. Looking into year 2021, our benchmark projection reports an 8.4% annual real GDP growth rate. Alternative scenario analyses and policy simulations are conducted to assess the impacts of potential downside risks and the corresponding policy options for ensuring implicit targets. Through the lens of these analyses, we conclude that a refocus on effective management of internal demand, while deepening structural reforms on supply side and advancing orderly opening up, can help smooth the internal and external circulations of the Chinese economy to achieve high-quality development.


Keywords


macroeconomic outlook ,alternative scenario analysis ,policy simulation ,systemic risk ,structural reforms ,opening up ,dual circulation


Cite this article


Kevin X.D. Huang, Shuangjian Li, Guoqiang Tian. Chinese Economy under the New Dual Circulation Strategy: Challenges and Opportunities—A Summary of the Annual SUFE Macroeconomic Report (2020–2021). Front. Econ. China, 2021, 16(1): 1‒29 https://doi.org/10.3868/s060-013-021-0001-0

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