BEIJING (AFP): China's new premier warned on Monday (March 13) that the country's five per cent growth target for 2023 will not be "easy" to achieve, as its rubber-stamp parliament wrapped up over a week of meetings.
The government set the economic growth target of "around five per cent" this month, one of the lowest in decades as China emerged from strict zero-Covid rules that dragged on its GDP.
And Li Qiang (pic)-- one of Chinese President Xi Jinping's most trusted allies, confirmed as premier over the weekend -- admitted that goal would not be easy.
"I'm afraid that reaching our growth target of around five percent will be no easy task, and will require that we redouble our efforts," Li said at a press conference in Beijing held to mark the closing of the rubber-stamp National People's Congress.
China posted just three per cent growth last year, missing its stated target of around 5.5 per cent by a wide margin as the economy strained under the impact of strict Covid policies and a property crisis.
Li said Monday that the modest figure "has been determined after a comprehensive consideration of various factors".
He warned of "many new challenges" to growth, but added that most people "don't fix their sights every day" on the country's growth figures.
Instead, he said, they care more about "specific issues close to them" such as housing, employment, income, education and health.
Li's comments cap over a week of high-level meetings in Beijing that also saw President Xi handed another term in office, further cementing his position as China's most powerful leader in generations.
Addressing the closing session of lawmakers in his first address since being handed a third term, Xi emphasised the need to strengthen national security.
Xi, 69, on Monday thanked the thousands of delegates at Beijing's Great Hall of the People for giving him a third term, vowing to "take the needs of the country as my mission, and the interests of the people as my yardstick".
"Security is the bedrock of development, while stability is a prerequisite for prosperity," Xi told the assembled delegates at the NPC's closing session.
"We must fully promote the modernisation of national defence and the armed forces, and build the people's armed forces into a Great Wall of steel that effectively safeguards national sovereignty, security and development interests."
He also called for consolidated stability in once-restive Hong Kong and unification with the self-ruled island of Taiwan, which China considers its territory.
"The trust of the people is the greatest driving force pushing me forward, and also a heavy responsibility on my shoulders," he said.
"The great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation has entered an irreversible historical process."