In a recent government notice, China has urged cities and local governments to prevent property market fluctuations with balanced plans of housing supply and demand, and to craft yearly housing development plans for 2024 and 2025.
The Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development issued a notice on Tuesday, asking all cities to assess local housing demands, craft yearly housing development plans based on their demographic and market changes, reflecting a proactive approach to addressing the challenges faced by the real estate sector.
Cities are encouraged to assess local residential housing demands accurately, preventing ups and downs in the property market.
Central to the notice is the annual housing development plans from 2024 to 2030. The plans are expected to specify property supply, structure, and location of housing and land, along with a reasonable estimation of the financing needs for local developers. A detailed approach to affordable housing supply is also underscored, with the aim to foster a balanced and healthy real estate market.
Highlighting the importance of the development plans, the notice requires cities integrate factors such as economic growth, demographic change and industry distribution into mapping their housing strategies.
The ministry places a strong emphasis on affordable housing supply, combining governmental support for basic housing needs with market-driven solutions for varied residential preferences. Cities are urged to accurately study local housing demands.
Local governments are also urged to prioritize the integration of housing development plans with their land use planning, ensuring a cohesive approach to overall urban development.
In 2024, China introduced multiple measures to stabilize its real estate sector and boost the industry's growth. With the establishment of real estate financing coordination mechanisms in 214 cities of 29 provinces, local governments now play a pivotal role in recommending projects for financial support, facilitating over 160 billion yuan ($22.2 billion) in credit to real estate projects under the initiative, according to official data.
China's central bank acted aggressively to cut the benchmark five-year loan prime rate (LPR) by 25 basis points to 3.95 percent on Tuesday, marking the largest rate rollback since the LPR system was introduced in 2019 which will ramp up market demand for long-term loans and propel the country's overall economic development.
The rate reduction, together with a recent package of pro-growth macro policy announcements, will fuel up two important segments of the economy - the real estate and the stock market. The move will continue to bode well for home-buying and accelerate Chinese equities trading.
With substantive monetary policy easing, market confidence and investor morale have been revitalized and are now on the upswing, as property dealers said that they have received rising visits by potential home-buyers, and China's A-share market has staged a rare eight-day rallying streak by Friday.
Flamboyant investors anticipate the streak will continue into this week. The Shanghai composite stock index soared more than 369 points or nearly 14 percent from February 6, a stellar market performance that reflects the rapidly rising enthusiasm of the investors and the society's rallying confidence in the broad economy. The monetary authorities' intensified effort to phase in a market-oriented, law-based and internationalized oversight system is certain to guide China's capital market into a new era of healthy growth.
Investors are now expecting more encouraging news to come in order to shore up the economic growth.
The annual "two sessions" - the National People's Congress (NPC) and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) - will open in Beijing in early March, and economists and analysts forecast more fiscal stimulus plans will be announced, targeting at investment in infrastructure, technology innovation, manufacturing upgrade and broad social programs, which will further buoy market confidence.
Throughout 2024, capital investment and domestic retail spending will continue to drive China's economic growth. Fiscal policy may likely take the lead, accompanied by firm support from monetary easing, a stabilizing property market, a reactivated capital market, and targeted growths in high-end manufacturing and the expected boom in new-quality productive forces.
Many Chinese economic research institutions and investment houses say the country will aim for around 5 percent GDP growth this year, which may seem like a daunting job in the backdrop of contracting global demand and economic gloom, but highly attainable provided China adheres to the ongoing growth-reinforcing policy choices.
Tuesday's 25-bps five-year interest rate cut, making the home mortgage rate approaching historical lows, is exquisitely heartening for the vast home buyers as they will need to pay substantially less in mortgages. The steep cut will effectively decrease the cost for buying residential properties, and ease the repayment pressure on existing home loans. By all metrics, it is of great importance to enliven the real estate sector from the pandemic-induced doldrums.
The move will also guide commercial banks in China to lower long-term borrowing costs faced by all types of enterprises, the private businesses in particular, which will help stimulate their demand for credit and fire up overall economic activity.
With the exception of a few regions that are still having their first-home mortgage rates above 4 percent, the majority of local home markets will be capable of enjoying a lending rate of below 4 percent, among the lowest rates in the world. In comparison, the average 15-year to 30-year mortgage rates in the US comes in at a range from 6.7 to 7.3 percent.
The rate cut will further inspire buying sentiment in the property market. Major Chinese cities would welcome a post-Spring Festival pickup in property sales, considering the positive effects of the measures already introduced in the first-tier and second-tier cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Suzhou and Guangzhou to lessen previously administrative curbs on property purchases.
At the same time, government departments at all levels are working together to revive the all-importance property market. An urban real estate financing coordination mechanism has been set up across more than 100 cities to strengthen and support the financing needs of real estate projects. According to official statistics, credit to real estate projects exceeding 160 billion yuan ($22.3 billion) has been extended under the mechanisms.
This should remove a major roadblock restraining real estate sector growth as a "white list" of housing developers has been announced and the eligible developers will be able to get bank loans at much easier terms - a significant step aimed at helping them build and deliver pre-sold homes and recapitalize their financial books promptly. More than 8,000 real estate projects nationwide were eligible for property financing, according to data revealed by China's five biggest commercial banks.
The real estate sector has played an outsized role in the Chinese economy. A reviving real estate sector, coupled with a rallying stock market, will strongly accelerate overall social confidence and the ordinary households' sense of wealth gain, which will ratchet up consumer appetite for shopping big-ticket items like cars and home appliances as well as leisure and travel spending. As a result, the overall economy will receive a strong boost in 2024.
China's new home prices in first-tier cities declined 0.3 percent in January in month-on-month terms, narrowing 0.1 percentage point from that of December, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed on Friday. That in secondary markets edged down by 1 percent in January compared with December, also narrowing 0.1 percentage point from the previous month. Observers said the moderate decline sends signals that the real estate market is gradually "stabilizing" in January, from its lukewarm status last year. They also voiced confidence that the market will embark on a firm recovery trajectory this year, fueled by a number of supportive policies including easing purchasing curbs, interest rate cuts and restoring market confidence.
In line with trends in first-tier cities, new and secondary home prices in second- and third-tier cities reported a fall in January, yet the drops have mostly tapered off from previous months.
Out of the 60 major cities, a total of 11 cities record new home sales price gain in January, compared with seven in December, the first time in almost a year that the number of cities that see soaring new property price shows an increase.
"The index is of landmark significance as it shows that housing demand is now gradually being released, and adjustments on home prices could be near the end," Yan Yuejin, research director at Shanghai-based E-house China R&D Institute, said in a note sent to the Global Times on Friday.
Yan said that the freshly released housing data in January provide a number of positive signals underscoring that pressures hang over the real estate market have been eased to a certain extent and are developing in a more stabilized way, which is also "conducive to shoring up homebuyers' confidence."
China's central bank on Tuesday cut its benchmark mortgage reference rate by 25 basis points (bps), the largest one-time rate reduction in years, in a renewed effort to stimulate credit demand and revive the property market.
In recent months, major Chinese cities, including Guangzhou, Suzhou, Zhengzhou and Shanghai, have moved to relax curbs on property buying. Starting late last year, the Chinese government reportedly began to draw up a "white list" of real estate companies that are eligible for concessional loans and other types of financial support from commercial banks.
Industry observers said they're optimistic on the long-term outlook as market further improves. They also expected more policies to be rolled out to "guide market expectation," and inject new dynamics to both the demand and supply sides of the market.
In 2023, China's property investment plunged 9.6 percent year-on-year to 11.1 trillion yuan ($1.64 trillion), while sales of commercial apartments also slumped 6.5 percent year-on-year to 11.7 trillion yuan, NBS data showed.
The chunyun or Spring Festival travel rush for 2024 - the world's largest annual human migration - officially starts on Friday, and is expected to set a new record of 9 billion passenger trips during the 40-day travel peak. From jam-packed transportation hubs to the hustle and bustle seen in markets nationwide, the anticipated booming Chinese New Year holidays are poised to continue the country's steady recovery while ushering in a lively 2024.
At the Beijing Capital International Airport on Thursday, crowds of tourists were seen in the departure hall, children and parents were holding hands waiting for checked luggage at the counter, and Year of the Dragon stickers were also pasted on glass doors, adding to the coming Chinese Lunar New Year atmosphere.
The airport will see 7.2 million passenger trips during chunyun, a growth of more than 60 percent from the same period of 2023, the airport said on Thursday, adding that overseas passenger flow will reach 1.41 million passenger trips following the implementation of visa reciprocity policies between China and many countries.
The scene witnessed by the Global Times at the airport is just a snapshot illustrating the brisk personnel flow nationwide at one of the busiest times of the year in China. Observers expected the travel rush to boost consumption for the upcoming holidays, which will inject fresh vitality and bolster the country's economic progress in 2024.
Flourishing consumption
A retired white-collar worker surnamed Yin from Southwest China's Chongqing Municipality recently completed a self-driving road trip in South China's Hainan Province with her family. Yin told the Global Times on Thursday that she had already experienced a tourism boom with crowds of visitors and packed restaurants even before the holidays officially kicked off, adding that the well-constructed roads and convenient infrastructure facilities have elevated the traveling experience.
Propelled by the record-high personnel flow and China's steady economic recovery, both domestic and international tourism is set to become major driving forces spurring consumption.
China and Singapore on Thursday agreed on mutual visa exemption which will officially come into effect on February 9, 2024 - the eve of the Chinese New Year, as ordinary passport holders from both sides will be able to enter each other's countries without visa requirements for activities including tourism for 30 days.
Searches for hotels in Singapore on Chinese online travel platform Qunar.com surged four times after the two countries announced the decision, the company told the Global Times on Thursday. Meanwhile, Tongcheng Travel told the Global Times that Singapore-related searches rose by more than 340 percent on the platform within an hour after the visa-free policy announcement.
Domestic tourism is also thriving, represented by the sparkling ice-snow trips in popular cities such as Harbin in Northeast China's Heilongjiang Province. Bookings for products related to winter tourism on Trip.com for the holidays increased by more than 10 times year-on-year, the company told the Global Times in a recent statement.
The record-high chunyun reflected China's rapid development in transportation construction amid its advancing economic recovery, Jiang Yiyi, deputy head of the School of Leisure Sports and Tourism at Beijing Sport University, told the Global Times on Thursday.
Jiang emphasized that activities related to the cultural sector such as visiting museums will also play a significant role in promoting consumption.
In addition, consumption themed around the Chinese New Year's holidays has also been jacked up. Restaurants have been busy taking bookings for traditional Spring Festival reunion dinners, while e-commerce platforms saw sales surging as consumers stocked up on holiday necessities, according to media reports.
Among the 9 billion passenger trips, around 1.8 billion will be made through rail, road, aviation and water transportation, while the remaining 7.2 billion trips are expected to be self-driving trips, according to recent data released by the Ministry of Transport.
China's railway system already saw a pre-Spring Festival ticket sales peak with 61.08 million tickets for chunyun sold since January 12, a year-on-year increase of 159 percent, China State Railway Group Co said in a statement sent to the Global Times on Wednesday.
Amid the expected record-breaking chunyun, domestic carriers have ramped up efforts to ensure transportation capacity.
Air China said on Tuesday that it plans to arrange 67,691 flights during the 40-day travel peak with an average of 1,693 flights per day, an increase of 32 percent compared with 2019 and 40.6 percent compared with 2023. Meanwhile, four homegrown C919 aircraft from China Eastern Airlines will also be serving the travel rush. The four planes will fly routes between Beijing and Shanghai, and Shanghai and Chengdu in Southwest China's Sichuan Province, the first time the aircraft is being used for the Spring Festival travel.
Vital momentum to last in 2024
Consumption played an indispensable role in bolstering China's economic growth in 2023, with the final consumption contributing to 82.5 percent of GDP growth, official data showed. Experts noted that the momentum will extend into 2024 with optimistic outlooks, while the consumption boom for the Chinese New Year holidays will become an essential engine driving economic growth in the first quarter.
The recently released GDP data from multiple Chinese provinces and cities have showcased the uplifting achievements realized nationwide, while last year's considerable economic growth rate will lay a solid foundation for this year's economic expectations, Cong Yi, a professor at the Tianjin School of Administration, told the Global Times on Thursday.
Shanghai's GDP expanded by 5 percent year-on-year in 2023, while Guangdong's GDP passed 13 trillion yuan ($1.83 trillion) for the first time, according to the "report cards" released by the local governments.
Meanwhile, Cong highlighted the culture-infused tourism boom as an example of the country's continuous upgrading in consumption structure, further adding to optimistic expectations for the coming year.
In 2023, the consumption sector, especially the services industry, contributed primarily to the GDP growth rather than the primary and secondary industries, Cao Heping, a professor of economics at Peking University, told the Global Times on Thursday.
Data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed that the growth of retail sales of services increased by 20 percent year-on-year last year, while the catering sector achieved a revenue exceeding 5 trillion yuan for the first time.
Cao noted that developing consumption-related investment along with relevant industries will be a major focal point for China's economic transformation.
Cao said that holiday consumption is set to hugely boost GDP growth for the first quarter of 2024. He added that if the GDP growth rate for the first quarter exceeds 5.2 percent and can get close to 5.5 percent, then the growth rate for 2024 is very like to approach 5.5 percent, higher than the estimate of 4.6 percent projected by some foreign institutions.
The world's second-largest economy posted a GDP growth of 5.2 percent for 2023, successfully meeting the previously set annual target and aligning with market forecasts.
China's pilot projects on industrialization of genetically modified (GM) corn and soybeans have shown promising results in terms of increased production and reduced costs, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs (MARA) said on Tuesday.
China launched the pilot projects in 2021, and by 2023, the projects expanded to cover 20 counties in five provinces including Hebei, Inner Mongolia, Jilin, Sichuan and Yunnan, Pan Wenbo, a senior official from MARA, provided an update on the country's pilot projects for the industrial application of GM corn and soybeans on Tuesday.
Compared with conventional varieties, the GM corn and soybeans have generally demonstrated superior performance in terms of yield increase, cost reduction, and efficiency enhancement, according to Pan.
MARA had approved several GM corn and soybean varieties based on the national biological breeding plan and relevant regulations and standards. Additionally, 26 enterprises were granted licenses for the production and operation of GM corn and soybean seeds.
The ministry requests that the planting areas for those varieties comply with China's arrangements for biological breeding industrialization, Pan said.
Pan noted that the MARA will thoroughly review the experiences gained from the pilot projects, improve supporting technologies and management measures, and steadily and cautiously promote relevant works under strict supervision and risk control.
The ministry will also strengthen technical reserve, enhance supervision and management, and expand the scope of application in a standardized and controlled manner as required, Pan said.
MARA has given licenses for 37 GM corn varieties and 10 genetically modified soybean varieties, involving 26 enterprises, in December 2023, marking the first group of GM corn and soybean seeds in China to obtain production licenses, which brings GM varieties a step closer to commercial cultivation.
In 2023, China achieved a record-high grain output of 695.41 million tons, increased of 8.9 million tons compared with the previous year. The expansion of soybean and oilseed cultivation has yielded notable results, with the soybean planting areas reaching 10.47 million hectares, achieving a record-high output of 20.84 million tons.
China said it will increase investment on technological innovation to bolster strategic emerging industries, the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council (SASAC) said on Wednesday, in a move to accelerate country's technology advancement and foster new productive forces.
Zhuang Shuxin, a spokesperson for the SASAC, said on Wednesday that China's central SOEs completed 2.18 trillion yuan ($307.8 billion) of investment in strategic emerging industries in 2023, rising 32.1 percent year-on-year.
Zhuang noted that the SASAC has initiated a number of new projects in photovoltaic hydrogen production, carbon fiber manufacturing and automotive chips, set up new enterprises in laser technology, quantum communication and satellite internet, in addition to reorganizing and merging companies in the areas of electronics, new energy, environment protection and vehicle production.
Regarding the extremely cold weather patterns this winter, the SASAC said it will further enhance the development of new energy sectors, including hydrogen and nuclear power, power storage and virtual power plants to ensure energy security.
As the end of September last year, the asset scale of 383 listed companies owned by central SOEs reached 53 trillion yuan, of which 154 were in emerging industries.
"The SASAC would urge central SOEs to increase the proportion of revenue and value added across strategic emerging industries to facilitate more companies to turn to an innovation-driven growth pattern, and help foster new productive forces," said Yuan Ye, an official with SASAC.
Editor's Note: Despite facing a complex international situation and multiple headwinds, China's economy expanded by 5.2 percent in 2023, surpassing the target. However, a new wave of very negative narratives about China's economy has emerged in the Western media lately, attempting to undermine investors' confidence in China's future. To counter Western media's malicious distortions that clearly deviates from the real state of the Chinese economy, the Global Times (GT) invited Jeffrey Sachs (Sachs), a world-renowned American economist, to provide his perspectives.
GT: How do you view the 5.2 percent growth of China's economy in 2023, the first year of the post-COVID recovery amid global gloom?
Sachs: This is a very respectable performance. US growth was about 2.5 percent. Remember too that the US population is growing about 0.5 percent per year, while population growth in China is essentially zero, so China's growth advantage is even greater when expressed in per capita terms.
GT: Mainstream US media and well-known economists criticized the performance of the Chinese economy in 2023 as being "weak." Many headlines claimed that the "Chinese economy encountered trouble and various indicators fell short of expectations." What is your perspective on that?
Sachs: The US government is actively trying to slow the Chinese economy through erecting trade and technology barriers. The US has put up barriers to China's exports to the US through both formal means such as tariffs and informal arm-twisting of US companies. The US has also introduced technology and investment barriers.
The US government and therefore the mainstream media are promoting the view that China's economy is in trouble. This is a bit of an echo chamber. One reporter close to the government writes it, and then other reporters repeat the same exaggerated story. They don't know much about China or about the deep strengths of China's economy, including major advances in technology, global export competitiveness, and high saving and investment rates.
US attempts to weaken the Chinese economy may have some modest short-run consequences (mainly slower export growth by Chinese companies and modest displacements of investments from China into ASEAN countries) but the adverse effects will not be large, in my view. The US government's mischief will fail, as it should.
GT: There were many new bright spots in China's economy in 2023. Exports of the "new three items" - electric vehicles (EVs), lithium batteries and solar cells - for the first time exceeded the 1 trillion yuan ($140 billion) mark. China became the largest EV exporter in 2023. How do you view these new growth engines?
Sachs: China is the world's low-cost producer of most green and digital technologies, such as EVs, photovoltaic systems and 5G equipment. This will put China in a strong global position for the coming decade, since the world needs to make a major energy transition and China will be a key provider of the new low-carbon infrastructure, connectivity and appliances.
GT: China's economic work is increasingly focused on expanding domestic demand. How do you view the advantages of China's large home market, and what suggestions do you have for fully tapping the potential of domestic market in China?
Sachs: I believe that China should still strive for export-led growth, but now more to the emerging market economies (BRICS, African Union, Latin America, Western Asia, Central Asia) than to the US or the EU. China should be the key provider for the green and digital transformation of the world's emerging economies. This will be good for China, for China's trade partners and for global environmental protection. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) remains very important in this regard. China should continue to champion the BRI as a very important initiative for global transformation, global growth and China's economic growth.
GT: What do you believe will be the key driving factors for China's economy in 2024?
Sachs: The key factors will be China's successful promotion of global growth in the emerging/BRICS economies, as well as China's continued dynamism in technological advancement - in artificial intelligence, semiconductors, zero-carbon energy, battery technology, precision medicine, precision agriculture, low-carbon transport (shipping and aviation), high-speed rail and other areas.
GT: How do you evaluate the current economic situation of China? How do you view China's economic prospects in 2024? Which areas do you think offer the greatest opportunities?
Sachs: As I've said, I believe that China's growth will be quality-based, mainly through technological upgrading, digital applications and the green transformation. This will happen within China and also between China and its major trading partners in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Of course, I hope that the US stops its trade war with China, which violates the WTO and is bad for the US and unhelpful for China.
GT: Global growth is projected to slow for the third year in a row - from 2.6 percent last year to 2.4 percent in 2024, the World Bank said. In a world battling economic uncertainties, how should major economies jointly tackle challenges and promote global growth rather than politicizing economic issues?
Sachs: The main solutions to the world economy are to stop the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, reduce trade tensions between the West and China, and cooperate on building an efficient digital, green global economy. All of this is possible through diplomacy.
The US should stop immediately trying to expand NATO to Ukraine, thereby ending the war in Ukraine. The US should stop arming Israel, thereby ending the war in the Middle East. And the US should abide by agreements with China regarding the Taiwan island, so as to reduce the tensions over Taiwan. In the 1982 US-China Communique, the US promised to phase out arms sales to Taiwan. The US should honor its agreements, leading to peaceful relations and a reduction of tension.
GT: How do you view the global significance of the steady and positive development of China's economy?
Sachs: China's economic progress has been extraordinarily positive for the Chinese people and very good for the world. Economic progress anywhere, including in China, is a win-win proposition for the world. The US mistakenly thinks that the world economy is a "zero-sum" struggle, in which China's progress is somehow bad for the US. This is a badly mistaken view.
China's stock markets staged a miraculous turnaround on Thursday, with the Shanghai Composite Stock Index regaining the psychologically important 2,800 points and closing at 2,845.78.
Analysts said the market is expected to stabilize and return to normal operations along with the country's sustained economic recovery, calling for stepped-up policy support to bolster the economy and beef up investors' confidence.
In the morning session on Thursday, the Shanghai Composite Index broke the 2,800 points and set a record low since May 2020. However, the Shanghai Composite Index closed up by 0.43 percent to end at 2,845.78 and the Shenzhen Component Index rose by 1.0 percent to 8,847.
"The recent fall in both A-share and Hong Kong stock markets reflects the pessimistic sentiment of investors. Once market expectations improve, domestic capital markets will gradually rebound," Yang Delong, chief economist at Shenzhen-based First Seafront Fund Management Co, told the Global Times on Thursday.
In 2024, China's stock market may display a path from decline-to-rise in 2024, Yang said.
Intensified macro-policies are needed to drive up investment, consumption and the property sector to enhance investors' confidence, he said, noting that institutional investors are expected to enter the A-share market to explore opportunities at the moment.
"Along with the continuous upswing in the country's economic recovery, bearish news will gradually disappear. As a result, the stock market is expected to stabilize and return to normal operations," Dong Shaopeng, a senior research fellow at the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at the Renmin University of China, told the Global Times on Thursday.
Dong said that financial regulators need to strengthen communications with investors to avoid investors' misinterpretation of regulations. In addition, authorities should strictly crack down on illegal behaviors in the field in accordance with laws.
Following the Central Financial Work Conference in October, a key meeting held on Tuesday reiterated building China into a country with great financial strength. Financial oversight needs to have "teeth and thorns" and be sharp-pointed, the meeting stressed, pointing out that law enforcement should be strict in market access, prudential oversight and behavioral regulation.
China's GDP expanded 5.2 percent year-on-year in 2023, higher than the target of about 5 percent set at the beginning of the year, official data showed.
In my opinion, China should set an economic growth target of 5 percent or above for 2024, as the global economy is projected to slow this year.
The reason is that the recovery of China's economy in 2023 was driven by increased consumption - that is, largely by putting existing capacity back to work. But the investment in China's economy in 2023 was not strong enough.
Fixed-asset investment reached 50.3 trillion yuan ($6.9 trillion), only up 3 percent year-on-year, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.
This means that, given that an economic recovery has already been taking place after the COVID-19 downturn, it is likely that capacity constraints will begin to appear unless fixed-asset investment increases during 2024.
If the rate of growth of investment increases, which is necessary if capacity problems are not to be encountered, growth of a bit above 5 percent is possible. But it is not possible to guarantee in advance that fixed-asset investment will increase - this will depend on policy.
It would be unwise to definitively set a target "above 5 percent" - although that would be desirable. Falling below 5 percent would, however, have strongly undesirable economic and social consequences. I would therefore formulate it as "5 percent or above."
The Working Group on Enhancing Climate Action in the 2020s between China and the US was successfully launched on Friday via video conference with officials from the two sides engaging in in-depth and friendly discussions on key areas of cooperation, including energy transition, methane, circular economy, low-carbon provinces or states and cities.
This conference took place as part of a series of interactions between China and the US in various sectors at the beginning of 2024 amid efforts to implement the consensus reached during the top leaders' meeting in San Francisco last year and to further stabilize bilateral relations, analysts said. However, they also cautioned about potential negative factors from the US side that could impact the relationship, including the US' recent interfering in the Taiwan regional leader election.
The Friday video meeting was co-chaired by Xie Zhenhua, China's special envoy for climate change, and John Kerry, US special presidential envoy for climate. The two sides have agreed to maintain close communication, exchange and mutual learning, and carry out practical cooperation under the working group mechanism, in accordance with the consensus of the Sunnylands Statement on Enhancing Cooperation to Address the Climate Crisis, according to China's Ministry of Ecology and Environment.
The Friday meeting is a continuation of a series of exchanges between China and the US in different fields. On Thursday, Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao held a phone call with US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. On Wednesday, Chinese State Councilor and Minister of Public Security Wang Xiaohong met with US Department of Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas via video link.
China and the US started this intensive cross-departmental exchange at the beginning of the year, which indicates that both sides are earnestly implementing the consensus reached at the San Francisco summit, Li Haidong, a professor at the China Foreign Affairs University, told the Global Times.
The frequent interactions are positive and demonstrate that at the beginning of this year, on the basis of broad communication and exchange, China and the US are actively managing their differences, said Li, noting that all these communications are also beneficial for both sides.
However, whether this trend can last and China-US relations can be further stabilized depend crucially on whether the Biden administration shows leadership decisiveness and takes concrete actions to prevent negative factors or extreme forces within the US from damaging the bilateral relationship and ensure that US policy toward China does not deteriorate sharply due to domestic political factors, said Li.
Lü Xiang, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, noted that the US still perceives China as a competitor, indicating the potential for confrontation between the two sides. Moreover, the US has not ceased its provocations, especially on the South China Sea and the Taiwan question, necessitating China's heightened vigilance, Lü told the Global Times.
For example, according to media reports, the Biden administration will dispatch a delegation comprised of former senior officials to the island of Taiwan shortly after the island's regional leader election to be held on Saturday.
China's Foreign Ministry spokesperson said on Friday that the US leaders have repeatedly expressed their adherence to the one-China principle, not supporting "Taiwan independence," and not seeking to use the Taiwan question as a tool to contain China.
"We hope that the US side will abide by its commitments, handle Taiwan-related questions carefully and properly, cease official exchanges with the island of Taiwan, refrain from sending any wrong signals to the separatist forces advocating 'Taiwan independence,' and refrain from interfering in Taiwan's regional elections in any form," said Mao.
If the US side genuinely wishes to maintain peace and stability in the Taiwan Straits, it should clearly oppose "Taiwan independence" and support China's peaceful reunification, said the spokesperson.
The US' tactics of saying one thing and doing another is shown in not only the Taiwan question but also other issues, and this is one of the cruxes of the bilateral relations, Li said.
The Taiwan question is the most serious and core issue of China-US relations at any time and China has put priority on it in dealing with its relations with the US, Li said, urging the US to fulfill its commitments on the Taiwan question and work in the same direction in promoting bilateral relations instead of damaging it.