From US trade tensions to Beijing's zero-Covid goal, 5 dilemmas facing China's economy

China is likely to switch its focus to supporting economic growth next year after regulatory crackdowns that encompassed property, education, technology and coal use in 2021, analysts say.

The government tightened regulatory oversight this year to reinforce China's socialist credentials ahead of the Communist Party's 2022 national congress, step up efforts to rebalance long-term growth, and respond to growing tensions with the United States.

However, the crackdown has exposed risks to China's growth model, which requires careful management of conflicting goals.

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While there could be more regulatory measures, Larry Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie Capital, believes policymakers are likely to focus on defending a minimum 5 per cent gross domestic product (GDP) growth target next year and avoid making drastic changes that could upset the status quo.

China's economy grew by 4.9 per cent in the third quarter of 2021 compared with a year earlier, down from the 7.9 per cent growth seen in the second quarter.

The nationwide property tax to help address wealth inequality could meet some resistance, while long-standing reforms of the state sector and household registration system, known as the Hukou, will not be a straight forward tasks, analysts say.

"More likely, policymakers would pick areas with less political resistance and lower growth impact. For instance, they could endeavour to make education, health care, elderly care and public housing more accessible to ordinary people," Hu said in a research note on November 19.

Here is a list of issues Beijing may have to balance next year to steady growth.

China's zero Covid-19 strategy and consumption

China's zero tolerance stance on the Covid-19 pandemic has helped it recover strongly from the public health crisis. However, as many countries open to the idea of living with the virus, the costs of maintaining the policy is rising.

Household consumption is likely to be hardest hit, analysts said, particularly in the services sector, as a result of travel restrictions, lockdowns and weak consumer sentiment.

"We expect China's export growth to rapidly decelerate due to a high base, a shift of foreign consumption from durable goods to services as more countries opt for living with Covid, a natural drop in durable goods demand, yuan strength due to limited services imports, and surging producer price index inflation," said Nomura in a report published earlier this month.