GTHT Macro Research: How to Boost Household Consumption Rate During the "15th Five-Year Plan" Period?

Deep News
Nov 04

**Key Investment Insights** The preliminary recommendations for the "15th Five-Year Plan" outline policy directions to stimulate household consumption. Beyond short-term measures, structural reforms—such as improving income distribution and social security—are expected to drive income growth, stabilize expectations, and enhance consumption propensity. By 2030, China’s household consumption rate is projected to rise to 42%-47%.

The "15th Five-Year Plan" reiterates the goal of "significantly increasing the household consumption rate," signaling a policy focus on boosting consumption over the next five years. Compared to the "12th Five-Year Plan" (which aimed for a "rising consumption rate") and the "10th Five-Year Plan" (targeting ~50%), the new target is more pragmatic, balancing feasibility and ambition.

**Root Causes of China’s Low Household Consumption Rate** 1. **Two-Factor Analysis: Consumption Propensity & Disposable Income Share** - Historically, only the "9th Five-Year" (1996–2000) and "12th Five-Year" (2011–2015) periods saw consumption rate growth. The former was driven by housing reforms lifting consumption propensity, while the latter relied on income distribution reforms and long-term consumption mechanisms. - The contrasting outcomes of the "10th Five-Year" (decline) and "12th Five-Year" (rise) highlight that structural reforms—not just targets—are critical to reshaping income distribution and consumer expectations.

2. **Four-Factor Decomposition (1995–Present)** - **Redistribution inefficiency** dragged the consumption rate down by 2.2 percentage points (pp). - **Limited property income channels** reduced it by 1.4 pp. - **Labor compensation share** had a minor drag of 0.4 pp. - **Volatile average consumption propensity** (down 3.9 pp) reflects weak social safety nets and housing wealth effects driving precautionary savings.

**Policy Scenarios for 2030** Under varying reform intensities, the household consumption rate could reach: - **Cautious (42.2%)**: Slow reforms, trend-based growth. - **Optimistic (47%)**: Breakthroughs in income/social security reforms. - **Neutral (44.1%)**: Moderate policy support and cyclical recovery.

**Economic Impact** With nominal GDP growth projected at 6.1% annually, higher consumption could contribute 2.9–3.9 pp to GDP growth by 2030.

**Risks**: Policy delays or weaker-than-expected consumer confidence.

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