China has quietly lowered its official economic growth target to between four and five percent, the weakest goal the communist regime has set since 1991.
The move signals growing concern inside Beijing and the ruling Chinese Communist Party about their economic sustainability.
Despite being the world’s second-largest economy, China’s problems include weak consumer spending, a collapsing property sector, and a shrinking population.
The country has also suffered due to President Trump’s tariffs on Chinese exports.
The new target was announced during China’s annual “Two Sessions” political gathering, where Communist Party leaders outline the country’s economic plans.
Premier Li Qiang presented the new figures as part of China’s latest Five-Year Plan.
China’s annual National People’s Congress opened in Beijing, where Premier Li Qiang announced that this year’s economic growth target will be lowered to 4.5%–5%.
This is the lowest growth target set by the country since 1991, reflecting that Beijing is willing to accept slower… pic.twitter.com/nIQtjYJ0S4
— China pulse (@Eng_china5) March 5, 2026
Beijing is attempting to reshape its economy while dealing with the fallout from years of heavy debt, a prolonged real-estate crisis and slowing domestic demand.
Analysts say the lower target may give Chinese officials more flexibility to avoid massive stimulus spending just to hit an unrealistic number.
For years, China relied heavily on exports and industrial production to drive growth. Employers are notorious for harsh labor conditions and the 996 working hours system.
Yet that model is increasingly under pressure as global trade tensions rise and Western countries begin pushing back against China’s economic rise.
Chinese growth is falling off a cliff. The CCP just announced its official growth target of between 4.5% and 5%.
This is the lowest growth in China in 30 years.
At the same time, with Venezuela and Iran off the chess board wrt energy supply, they are increasingly challenged…
— Chamath Palihapitiya (@chamath) March 5, 2026
The CCP insists that its new Five-Year Plan will focus heavily on technology, artificial intelligence, and advanced manufacturing.
Officials also promised more than 100 major industrial and infrastructure projects over the next five years, targeting sectors such as energy, transportation, and scientific research.
Like many Asian countries, China is also facing a worsening demographic crisis.
Birth rates are falling sharply, and the country’s population is rapidly aging. a disastrous trend for economic growth.
While Beijing claims it achieved roughly five percent growth in 2025, some economists remain skeptical of China’s official statistics.
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