# Five-Year%20Plan
Latest news and articles about Five-Year%20Plan
Total: 16 articles found

Beijing Warns Taiwan: 'Independence Is a Dead End' as Mainland Signals Leverage in 15th Five‑Year Plan Era
A senior Chinese NPC delegate warned that Taiwan independence is a ‘‘dead end’’ and urged Taiwanese to distrust external backers, framing unification as inevitable amid Beijing’s growing economic and military strength. He presented the mainland’s upcoming 15th Five‑Year Plan as a major opportunity for Taiwan’s participation, while blaming the DPP and foreign arms sales for raising tensions.

Beijing Pushes Consumption, Legal Certainty and Tech Self‑Reliance as NPC Sets Out '15th Five' Agenda
At the NPC press conference opening the 14th session, Beijing framed the '15th Five' era around boosting consumption, deepening rule‑based openness for foreign investors, and accelerating technological self‑reliance, especially in AI. Lawmaking — including a national development planning law and an ecological environment code — is being used to lock in those strategic priorities and offer regulatory predictability.

CICC Frames China’s Two Sessions as Market Catalyst, Favouring Tech and Cyclicals
CICC’s Two Sessions preview frames the 2026 meetings as a policy inflection point: Beijing will prioritise industrial modernisation, domestic demand and market unification while continuing to address property and local‑debt risks. The bank recommends investors favour technology‑growth and cyclical resource sectors, but cautions that implementation and financial stability risks will shape outcomes.

China closes the '14th Five' with 5% growth — industrial upgrade and exports bolster a still-fragile recovery
China reported 5.0% real GDP growth in 2025 and declared the goals of the 14th Five-Year Plan achieved, driven by gains in high-tech manufacturing, exports and services. Yet consumption remains tepid, fixed-asset investment — particularly in property — has fallen markedly, and demographic decline and external uncertainty pose medium-term risks.