Opinion | Will China’s bid to boost domestic demand pay off?
Beijing is making great strides in the transition towards a consumption-based economy. However, the path forward is not without risk

This vision is not new. Policymakers have been talking about rebalancing for over a decade. But the timing of Li’s message is noteworthy: global demand is faltering, supply chains are shifting and geopolitical tensions are reshaping the global trade landscape. For China – and much of Asia – this consumption pivot could be transformative, provided it is backed by strong structural reform.
The broader context is more complicated. Imports declined for a second straight month in June, indicating that internal demand – while recovering – is still uneven. As of last year, China’s per capita savings stood at 24.5 per cent, lower than the Covid-era peak of 2022 but still quite high.
Part of the caution stems from structural factors. Chinese households still save at high rates, shaped by a legacy of limited social safety nets and concerns around healthcare, education and retirement. Disposable income rose 5.5 per cent in the first quarter of 2025, but that growth has yet to translate into broad-based confidence.
