As part of an official visit to Switzerland, Xi will attend and open the annual economic meeting in the ski resort of Davos on January 17, accompanied by the largest delegation of officials from China since the world's most populous country first participated at the forum nearly four decades ago.
Xi's attendance comes as China has sought to be more influential globally and present itself as a force for stability and champion of globalization and opponent of protectionism.
"We are all aware that we are now in the transition in the world to a multilateral, to a multipolar, geopolitical and geo-economic structure," World Economic Forum founder Klaus Schwab told reporters in Geneva today.
"China will equal the United States soon as far as economic power is concerned," Schwab added, noting a "strong" Chinese business delegation would accompany Xi.
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"In the spirit of Davos, we want to engage them as much as possible," he said.
At the same time, while Xi has promised to make the world's second-largest economy more competitive and productive by giving market forces a bigger role, reform advocates complain Beijing is failing to reduce the dominance of state companies.
Foreign companies say regulators are trying to squeeze them out of technology and other promising fields.
Ministry spokesman Lu Kang says Xi's January 15-18 trip to Switzerland will also include visits to the offices of the United Nations and the World Health Organization in Geneva, and the International Olympics Committee's headquarters in Lausanne.
Activist Hollywood stars such as Matt Damon and Forest Whitaker are expected to attend along with outgoing US Secretary of State John Kerry and outgoing Vice President Joe Biden, long a Davos devotee.
The presidents of Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Ukraine and South Africa also are expected be there, as is British Prime Minister Theresa May.