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China Signals Tolerance for Slower Growth with Revised 2026 Outlook
Abstract:Economists at ING note that China is lowering its long-term GDP growth targets, signaling a shift toward sustainable but slower expansion.

China appears to be recalibrating its long-term economic expectations, signaling a move away from aggressive growth targets. According to INGs Chief Economist for Greater China, Lynn Song, the nation has adjusted its 2026GDP growth target to a range of 4.5–5.0%.
Strategic Shift
This adjustment follows three years of targeting “around 5%” growth. Analysts interpret the revision as a signal of Beijings increasing tolerance for slightly slower expansion rates as the economy matures. By softening the explicit target, policymakers may be prioritizing the quality and sustainability of growth over sheer headline numbers, keeping long-term development ambitions intact while acknowledging current structural headwinds.
Key Data Points
- Revised Outlook: 2026GDP target lowered to 4.5–5.0%.
- Previous Baseline: Consistently targeted around 5% for the past three years.
- Source: ING Chief Economist for Greater China.
Disclaimer:
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