UBS Economics-China Economic Perspectives _China Outlook 2026-27 Resilien...-118797874
ab11 November 2025Global ResearchChina Economic PerspectivesChina Outlook 2026-27: Resilience and Rebalancing amid UncertaintiesHow will China's key growth drivers evolve in 2026-27? Our baseline forecast expects China's GDP growth to slow modestly to 4.5% in 2026. We expect exports to decelerate in 2026, leading to a much narrower growth contribution from net exports. Overall domestic activities are likely to stay largely resilient, with property downturn to continue albeit with smaller contractions, consumption to maintain a modest but softer pace, infrastructure and manufacturing investment to recover modestly from the sharp YoY decline in H2 2025. We expect CPI inflation to increase to 0.4% and PPI to narrow decline. In 2027, stabilizing property activities, normalizing export growth and steady consumer confidence may underpin a slightly better GDP growth (4.6%), higher inflation and stronger RMB exchange rate. Property market adjustment still needs more timeThe ongoing sharp property downturn was driven by weakening underlying housing demand on slowing urbanization and unfavorable demographics, a shift from purchase to rent amid falling prices, and elevated inventory-to-sales ratio with limited progress of home destocking. We think the government could continue to lower mortgage rates, facilitate more home destocking and push for structural reforms. Overall, we expect property sales, new starts and investment to decline by 5-10% in 2026 and 0-5% in 2027 (vs 5-10%/15-20%/10-15% decline in 2025), and the overall drag on GDP growth may narrow to 0.5-1ppt in 2026 and much smaller in 2027 (vs 1.5-2ppt in 2025).Modest policy support and more structural changesWe expect modest policy support in 2026 amid slowing exports and continued property downturn. We expect the broad augmented fiscal deficit to expand by ~1ppt of GDP in 2026 (vs ~1.5ppt in 2025), including a stable headline budget deficit at 4%, higher special CGB of RMB 1.6-1.8trn and special LGB of RMB 4.8trn. We expect another 20bps of policy rate cut by end-2026, 25-50bp RRR cut and more use of other liquidity tools. The 15th Five-Year Plan aims to boost consumption as a top task, although the initial effort may be still modest. Anti-involution campaign is likely incorporated in building a “unified national market”. Opening up and decarbonization are emphasized. The rise of innovation and “new economy” We estimate the innovation-driven “new economy” sectors accounted for 15-20% of China’s GDP and 10-15% of total investment in 2024, and contributed around 1/4 of GDP growth during 2020-24. The rapid rise of “new economy” sectors has helped offset the significant growth drag from property downturn. China vows to continue boosting innovation, raising the R&D spending share in GDP from 2.7% in 2024 to over 3.2% in 2030. With continued policy priority, sustained investment and strong R&D spending, we expect the “new economy” sectors to continue growing faster than the rest of economy, leading t
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