鶹ý

News

China’s new five-year plan to focus on technological development and carbon neutrality – as well as serving the country’s rapidly growing middle class

The plan has global significance because China usually achieves the goals it sets out
The photo shows Professor of International Business Carl Fey, and it was taken by Mortti Saarnia / Aalto University.
In China, businesses and citizens usually try to do whatever they can to contribute to the goals set by the government, Professor Carl Fey says. Photo: Mortti Saarnia / Aalto University.

China has released its proposed new five-year plan, which will be finalised and approved by the China National People’s Congress in March 2021. Professor of International Business Carl Fey has reviewed the key content of the proposed new plan, the fourteenth of its kind, and explains why the decisions made by the world’s second largest economy have effects for the rest of the world.

‘The upcoming five-year plan has global significance because China normally achieves the goals it sets out. In China, businesses and citizens usually try to do whatever they can to contribute to the goals set by the government, whereas people and businesses in many other countries often try to avoid what the government suggests,’ says Professor Fey.

Products and services for the rapidly growing middle class

According to Fey, while China’s five year plans are extensive and cover many topics, the most important focuses of the upcoming five-year plan are double-circulation and technological innovation. In addition, China will launch impressive environmental plans, improve intellectual property protection, and focus more on becoming more digital.

‘Double-circulation means that China does not only want to be the export-focused economy that it has historically been, but it aims at producing products for its own growing middle class, too. China also aims at developing services as a growing part of GDP,’ Fey explains.

‘The new approach is natural since China’s middle class is growing rapidly and will help the country maintain growth. However, focus on China’s own market is partially also a reaction to the realities of the world as many countries, such as the US, have become more protectionist.’

Focus on technological and environmental development

Due to the increasing cost of labour and China’s aim to become an innovator – instead of just being the world’s factory – the country will also pay increasing attention to technological innovation. The push for technological development started already in the country’s previous five-year plan but is an even more important focus in the upcoming five-year plan. This puts pressure to the development of intellectual property protection.

‘More and more Chinese firms are working hard to create innovations, and China is filling more patents each year than any other country in the word. So it is not only foreign firms but also Chinese firms that are pushing for improved intellectual property protection,’ Professor Fey says.

Finally, China also has impressive environmental plans as part of the 14th five-year plan. The country, which is currently the world’s largest emitter of carbon dioxide, has announced that it will try to peek these emissions by 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality by 2060. 

‘Chinese citizens are tired of having poor air quality and other environmental problems. As a result, China has voluntarily and unilaterally agreed to aggressive environmental goals in the coming years, and these will be supported by the 14th five-year plan. Coal is still a key source of energy in China and decreasing this will be a key challenge, but large investments in alternative technologies, such as electric batteries, wind, and solar energy have already been made, and they will play increasingly important roles moving forward,’ Fey says.  

More information:

Professor of International Business Carl Fey
Aalto University School of Business, Department of Management Studies
carl.fey@aalto.fi
+358 50 4081070
wechat: carlfey

Read more

talvikuva Kauppiksen uudesta rakennuksesta
News
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Grey stone stock exchange building facade with tall windows and flags reading BÖRS and PÖRSSI at the entrance
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Finland ranks among Europe’s top investing nations, study finds

Nearly half of Finnish households now invest in stocks or mutual funds, according to a new study from Aalto University.
Family posing by a fjord harbour with red cabins and snow-capped mountains in the background
Awards and Recognition, Cooperation, Research & Art Published:

The film Fjord wins the Palme d'Or at Cannes – featuring a number of Finnish creators

The film was co-produced by Jussi Rantamäki of the film company Aamu, and it also features a Finnish costume and sound designer.
Graphic poster with dark leaves, grey textured surface and Finnish words “Näytös 26 Näyttely”.
Research & Art Published:

Näytös/Näyttely26 transforms Helsinki’s Lasipalatsi Quarter into a hub for fashion and textile expertise

The event showcases Aalto’s comprehensive expertise in textiles, clothing, and fashion, as students graduating from both the Bachelor's Major in Fashion as well as the Master's Major in Fashion and Textile Design will present their thesis work.
Brown-toned display of wood, pulp, fibre, thread cone and knitted fabric, showing stages from log to textile.
Research & Art Published:

The journey of a 17th-century shipwreck continues as a unique knitted dress

Researchers at Aalto University transformed surplus wood from the Hahtiperä shipwreck into textile fibre, spun it into yarn, and knitted it into a dress using new AI-assisted technology.