Supply-side structural reforms to improve productivity will help China gather future growth steam, Finance Minister Lou Jiwei has said.
Despite heavy downward economic pressure, the Chinese economy is still resilient with generally positive fundamentals and huge potential, Lou wrote in the latest edition of the Qiushi Magazine, the flagship journal of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, Xinhua news agency reported on Saturday.
The labour force and capital inputs were used to power a country's growth in the initial period, but post-industrial economic development will rely more on improvement of factors such as technology, management and labor force quality, Lou pointed out.
The Chinese economy is facing headwinds from rising labour costs, falling marginal efficiency of capital, high leverage ratio and old-fashioned mechanisms that inhibit the effective allocation of resources, Lou noted.
To address these challenges, China is pushing ahead with supply-side reform featuring reducing overcapacity, de-stocking, reducing costs and shoring up weak growth areas to foster emerging growth engines, Lou wrote.
Measures will be taken to promote reforms in state-owned enterprises, the fiscal and financial mechanisms, social welfare system, labour force market, science and technology management, land system and urbanisation as well as agricultural modernization, he added.