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2024 National People's Congress

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  • 2024 National People's Congress
  • 第十四届全国人民代表大会第二次会议
  • Dì-shísì Jiè Quánguó Rénmín Dàibiǎo Dàhuì Dì-èrcì Huìyì
  • 2nd Plenary Session of the
  • 14th National People's Congress

  • 5 March – 11 March

President Premier Congress Chairman
Xi Jinping Li Qiang Zhao Leji
since
10 March 2023
since
11 March 2023
since
10 March 2023

Website

The 2024 National People's Congress (NPC) was the Second Plenary Session of the 14th National People's Congress of the People's Republic of China (PRC). It was held from 5 March to 11 March 2024, concurrently with the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) as part of the annual Two Sessions. The NPC was held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing.

The event was held largely without COVID restrictions for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic.[1] On 4 March, The NPC spokesperson Lou Qinjian said Premier Li Qiang won't hold the annual press conferences for the remaining term of China's parliament, which ends in 2027, ending a tradition maintained for three decades.[2]

The session

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NPC deputies meet with the press before the start of the session
The session on 5 March

In his maiden government work report on 5 March, Premier Li Qiang spent considerable time discussing how to help struggling private players as well as ease the concerns of foreign businesses. He promised the government would settle overdue payments owed to private businesses.[3] The report mentioned that the government would want to make it easier for migrant workers to be able to change their hukous to urban ones, a subject has long been discussed.[4] It also mentioned that China will improve birth policy to support a growing elderly population by raising benefits and basic pensions and pushing forward a private pension system.[5] Li said Hong Kong should continue implementing the governing principles of “One country, two systems” and “patriotic administration”, and added that Beijing would support Hong Kong in developing its economy and improving residents’ livelihood.[6] He attributed a litany of achievements in 2023 to Xi, and called for officials to rally more closely around the Chinese Communist Party with Xi Jinping at its core.[7] Li rattled off the report in 50 minutes, the shortest time since 2001.[8] Xinhua News Agency summarized the highlights of the report, including:[9]

Xi Jinping,[10] Li Qiang, Zhao Leji, Wang Huning, Ding Xuexiang, Li Xi and Han Zheng attended separately deliberations at the second session of the 14th NPC on later that day,[11] 6 March[12] and 7 March.[13] On 7 March, the delegation of deputies from Xinjiang in a group meeting denial persecution of Uyghurs and pledged to continuous opening-up.[14]

On 8 March, the NPC deputies held group meetings to review the work report of the NPCSC.[15] Zhao Leji delivered the report at the second plenary meeting of the second session of the 14th NPC.[16] The report pledged to enact legislation including an emergency management law and atomic energy law, and will revise laws on national defence education and cybersecurity.[17]

Voting results

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Resolutions

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Topic For Against Abstain Rate
Premier Li Qiang's Government Work Report 2,895 2 3 99.83%
Amendment to the Organic Law of the State Council 2,883 8 9 99.41%
Report on the Implementation of the 2023 National Economic and Social Development Plan and the 2024 Draft Plan 2,879 10 11 99.28%
Report on the Execution of the Central and Local Budgets for 2023 and on the Draft Central and Local Budgets for 2024 2,876 13 11 99.17%
Chairman Zhao Leji's NPCSC Work Report 2,888 7 5 99.58%
Chief Justice Zhang Jun's Supreme People's Court Work Report 2,834 4 22 97.72%
Procurator-General Ying Yong's Supreme People's Procuratorate Work Report 2,864 27 9 98.76%

Economic targets and budget

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The following economic targets were set by the government work report submitted to the NPC:

2024 target Ref.
GDP growth ~5% [18]
CPI ~3% [18]
New urban jobs 12 million [18]
Deficit-to-GDP ratio 3% [19]

The NPC session also adopted the following central government budget:[20]

Government budget

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In trillions of renminbi:

Planned % change
Central general public budget revenue 10.243 2.9
Central general public budget expenditure 14.406 2
Central government expenditure 4.152 8.6
Transfer to local governments 10.203 4.1
Local general public budget revenue 12.153 3.7
Local general public budget expenditure 24.347 3
National general public budget revenue 22.395 3.3
National general public budget expenditure 28.549 4

Central public budget expenditure

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In billions of renminbi:

Planned % change
General public services 158.6 4.5
Diplomacy 60.8 6.6
National defense 1,665.5 7.2
Public security 227.7 1.4
Education 164.9 5
Science and technology 370.8 10
Culture, tourism, sports and media 19.0 10
Social security and employment 117.5 11.6
Health 33.0 11.3
Energy conservation and environmental protection 20.9 7.1
Urban and rural communities 0.4 30.7
Agriculture, forestry and water 27.3 6.5
Transportation 84.8 9.6
Resource exploration and industrial information 44.8 11.1
Commercial services 4.2 39.9
Financial 60.5 15.4
Natural resources, oceanography and meteorology 28.2 –1.4
Housing security 62.3 0.2
Stockpiling grain, edible oils, and other materials 140.6 8.1
Debt interest payments 777.3 11.9
Total 4,152.0 8.6

Source:[21]

References

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  1. ^ Simone McCarthy; Nectar Gan (2024-03-11). "Tighter control and high-tech push: Key takeaways from China's biggest annual political event". CNN.
  2. ^ Adrianna Zhang; Wenhao Ma; Bo Gu; Chuang Chih-wei (2024-03-04). "China Watchers: No Premier's Annual Press Conference, No Difference". Voice of America.
  3. ^ Luna Sun (2024-03-05). "China's 'two sessions' 2024: did Premier Li Qiang's speech move the needle for foreign, private business?". South China Morning Post.
  4. ^ HUIZHONG WU (2024-03-06). "Economic plans, Taiwan and other things to know from the opening of China's legislature". AP.
  5. ^ "China's NPC: What you need to know". Reuters. 2024-03-05.
  6. ^ "Hong Kong should continue 'patriotic' administration, China's no. 2 official Li Qiang says at Two Sessions meeting". Hong Kong Free Press. 2024-03-05.
  7. ^ Joe Leahy; Ryan McMorrow; Hudson Lockett (2024-03-05). "China sets 'ambitious' 5% growth target and flags risks to economy". Financial Times.
  8. ^ CHARLIE CAMPBELL (2024-03-07). "'Head in the Sand': Why China's Static 2024 Congress Should Worry Everyone". Time.
  9. ^ "Highlights of Chinese government work report". Xinhuanet. 2024-03-05.
  10. ^ "Xi stresses developing new quality productive forces according to local conditions". Xinhuanet. 2024-03-05.
  11. ^ "Chinese leaders attend deliberations at annual legislative session". China Daily. 2024-03-06.
  12. ^ "Chinese leaders join NPC deputies, political advisors in deliberation, discussions". People's Daily. 2024-03-07.
  13. ^ "Chinese leaders attend deliberations at annual legislative session". Xinhuanet. 2024-03-07.
  14. ^ Chen Jing (2024-03-07). "中共新疆党委书记马兴瑞:不能因恐怖主义分裂主义不开放". Lianhe Zaobao (in Chinese (China)).
  15. ^ "Advisory: Schedules for China's "two sessions" on March 8". Xinhuanet. 2024-03-07.
  16. ^ "Chinese lawmakers deliberate work report of NPC Standing Committee". Xinhuanet. 2024-03-08.
  17. ^ Joe Cash; Laurie Chen (2024-03-08). "China's top legislators pledge to safeguard sovereignty, security interests". Reuters.
  18. ^ a b c "China unveils 2024 growth targets with focus on high-quality development". State Council of the People's Republic of China. 6 March 2024. Retrieved 13 October 2024.
  19. ^ "China sets targeted fiscal deficit-to-GDP ratio at 3%". China Daily. 5 March 2024. Retrieved 13 October 2024.
  20. ^ "Report on the Execution of the Central and Local Budgets for 2023 and on the Draft Central and Local Government Budgets for 2024" (PDF). NPC Observer. 5 March 2024. Retrieved 13 October 2024.
  21. ^ "2024年中央本级支出预算表" [2024 Central Government Expenditure Budget]. Ministry of Finance. Retrieved 13 October 2024.
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Preceded by Annual National People's Congress Sessions of the
People's Republic of China

March 2024
Succeeded by