
China's economy looks different than it was going into the pandemic
BEIJING — The Chinese economy of 2023 almost definitely won't look like the Chinese economy of 2019.
Real estate has slumped under Beijing's crackdown. Exports have tapered off following a surge. Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com this year replaced Huawei, hit by U.S. restrictions, as the largest non-state-owned enterprise in China by revenue.
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In the last month, Beijing suddenly ceased many of the lockdown measures and Covid testing requirements that had weighed on economic growth over the last 18 months. Analysts warn of a bumpy road to full reopening, but they now expect China's economy to bounce back sooner than previously forecast.
The elements underpinning that growth will almost certainly look different than they did three years ago, according to economists.
China's growth model is moving from one highly dependent on real estate and infrastructure to one in which the so-called digital and green economy play greater roles, analysts at leading Chinese investment bank CICC said in their 2023 outlook released last month. They cited the ruling Chinese Communist Party's 20th National Congress emphasis on innovation.
The digital economy category includes communication equipment, information transmission and software. Green economy refers to industries that need to invest in order to reduce their carbon emissions — electric power, steel and chemicals, among others.

Over the next five years, cumulative investment into the digital economy is expected to grow more than sevenfold to reach 77.9 trillion yuan ($11.13 trillion), according to CICC estimates.
That surpasses anticipated cumulative investment into real estate, traditional infrastructure or the green economy — making digital the largest of the four categories, the report said.
In 2021 and 2022, real estate was the largest category by investment, the report said. But the CICC analysts said that this year, investment into real estate fell by about 22% from last year, while that into the digital and green sectors grew by about 24% and 14%, respectively.
Beijing cracked down on developers' high reliance on debt in 2020, contributing to defaults and a plunge in housing sales and investment. Authorities this year have eased many of those financing restrictions.
Fading exports
Consumer comeback?
He expects retail sales to rise by 6.8% next year, and national GDP to grow by 4.8%.
Goldman Sachs analysts raised their 2023 GDP forecast from 4.5% to 5.2% on the economy reopening sooner than expected, with consumption as the main driver.
However, they cautioned that income and consumer confidence will take time to heal, meaning any release next year of "pent-up demand" may be limited outside of a few categories such as international travel.
Rich spend more, poor spend less
Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/12/22/chinas-economy-looks-different-than-it-was-going-into-the-pandemic.html