China pivots to ‘investing in people’ strategy as growth engine switches gears
Premier announces changes in spending priorities, aiming to boost consumption, but doubts remain whether resources will match ambitions

China will allocate more of its fiscal spending this year towards human capital and social safety nets, as Beijing seeks to boost domestic demand and unlock new growth through “investing in people”.
Unlike Western strategies that prioritise tax cuts for the wealthy to drive growth, China is emphasising the need to improve public well-being, with specific targets now enshrined in policy road maps.
In his report, the premier vowed to increase inputs in areas closely related to human development. These include formulating and implementing plans to boost residents’ incomes; rolling out more supportive and friendly policies for childbearing; expanding support for senior care; and launching large-scale vocational skills training programmes.
Beijing has set seven livelihood-related goals among its 20 numerical targets for the five years, according to the full text of the 15th five-year plan released the same day. The plan guides China’s policy priorities from 2026 to 2030.
These include raising the average duration of education for the working-age population to 11.7 years by 2030, boosting the proportion of nursing beds in senior care institutions to 73 per cent, and increasing the number of doctors per 1,000 people to 3.7.
Such investments are part of the government’s efforts to “enhance the internal impetus and reliability of the domestic economic cycle”, according to a budget report delivered on Thursday by the Ministry of Finance.
