# special sovereign bonds
Latest news and articles about special sovereign bonds
Total: 7 articles found

China Keeps the Fiscal Foot on the Gas for 2026: More Bonds, Bigger Transfers and a Push for Consumption and Tech
The Chinese Ministry of Finance has vowed to continue an active, expansionary fiscal stance in 2026, combining large bond‑funded investment, targeted consumption support and increased transfers with stronger debt governance and fiscal reforms. The policy mix aims to stabilise growth while prioritising technology, green transition and social spending, though implementation and local debt management remain the principal risks.

Beijing Recalibrates for Resilience: More Social Spending, Big Bets on AI and Future Industries in 2026 Work Plan
China's 2026 government work report lowers the GDP target to 4.5–5% and shifts fiscal priorities toward consumption, social protection and strategic technologies. Beijing plans targeted bond-financed measures to boost demand while concentrating public funds on AI, semiconductors and other future industries as part of a broader push for resilience and technological self-reliance.

Beijing Turns to Long-Term Debt and Family Subsidies to Repair Growth — Markets and Tech Watch Closely
Beijing plans to issue large volumes of ultra-long special sovereign bonds in 2026 to support major projects, shore up state banks and give local governments funding room, while lawmakers propose big increases in childcare subsidies financed by long-term bonds. The measures underline an active fiscal response to slowing growth but raise questions about future debt burdens, market reaction and the sustainability of bond-financed social spending.

China Keeps Deficit Ratio at About 4% While Adding Long‑dated Bonds — A Measured Push to Start the 15th Five‑Year Plan
China will keep its fiscal deficit target at about 4% of GDP for 2026 while raising the nominal deficit to 5.89 trillion yuan and issuing 1.3 trillion yuan of ultra‑long sovereign bonds. The package aims to provide measured stimulus to kick‑start the 15th Five‑Year Plan, combining infrastructure and new‑economy investment with greater social spending, while managing central leverage.

Beijing Layers Fresh Fiscal Lifelines to Spur Consumption and Private Investment in 2026
China has rolled out a six-part fiscal-financial package for 2026 focused on propping up domestic demand by cutting private financing costs, expanding guarantee and risk-sharing schemes, and extending consumer loan subsidies. The measures are paired with commitments to sustain fiscal outlays in priority areas, improve budget efficiency, and accelerate technology and green transitions.

China’s 2026 Fiscal Playbook: Bigger, Better‑Targeted Spending to Shore Up Growth and Jobs
China’s finance ministry has outlined a 2026 fiscal strategy that raises the overall spending envelope while reallocating funds toward consumption, social services and high‑impact projects. The plan marries a larger deficit and bond issuance with zero‑base budgeting, better performance management and reforms to transfer payments and tax preferences to boost domestic demand and sustain growth.

China Pledges Bigger, Smarter Spending in 2026 as Fiscal Push Shifts from Quantity to Quality
China’s finance ministry has pledged that public spending will rise in 2026 while shifting focus to more efficient, targeted outlays. The statement follows a large 2025 fiscal expansion — including an elevated deficit and heavy bond issuance — and is accompanied by measures to stimulate consumption, support enterprise innovation, and clean up local fiscal practices.