City
Epaper

Experts disappointed with China's Third Plenum Communique, which fails to address current issues

By ANI | Updated: July 21, 2024 15:55 IST

Taipei [Taiwan], July 21 : After China completed the Third Plenum of its 20th Central Committee with a 5,000-word ...

Open in App

Taipei [Taiwan], July 21 : After China completed the Third Plenum of its 20th Central Committee with a 5,000-word communique issued on July 18, experts expressed dissatisfaction with the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) latest plan and described it as a vague plan for the country's economy and a lack of measures to address China's current economic problems, Voice of America reported.

Shi He-ling, an Associate Professor of Economics at Monash University in Australia, who expressed disappointment with the outcome of the Third Plenum, also mentioned, that the plan released by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) merely sells out the achievements of the ruling party, and criticises the previous party leaders.

However, the plan misses any specific definitions that are measurable. "It does not make macroeconomic adjustments at all but is like a philosophical article, which is basically a cliche," Shi told.

According to Yeh Yao-Yuan, the Chairman of the Department of Political Science at the University of St. Thomas in Houston in the US, under the framework of "Xi Thoughts," it is difficult for the economic exposition of this communique to be new.

Further, he added that despite repeatedly selling their "socialist market economic system," it will not be able to reverse China's economic decline and Xi's economic reform is in fact "changing things to their old ways."

The VOA news report also claimed that the CCP statement got 100 million views on Weibo (China's social media platform). However, there was no substantial discussion of the same in China. Another decision taken at the Plenum that gathered attention was the removal of former Defence Minister Li Shangfu.

Additionally, Li Yuchao and Sun Jinming of the People's Liberation Army's (PLA) Rocket Force were also removed from the Central Committee.

While responding, Chong Ja Ian, an associate professor of political science at the National University of Singapore, said, "Beijing dislikes Chinese people arguing online about the CCP's high-level personnel because comments might call into question the party's decisions and judgement, especially as Qin was previously Xi's close confidant and the foreign minister."

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

Other Sports5th T20I: Happy that Yuvraj still holds fastest T20I fifty record, says Pandya after 16-ball fifty

NationalOdisha vigilance arrests Additional Tehsildar in Jajpur

InternationalUS says it is grateful as Pakistan weighs Gaza troop role

Other Sports5th T20I: ‘Surya the batter’ went missing somewhere, he will be back stronger, says Yadav

NationalDrug factory busted in Rajasthan; 40 kg mephedrone among seizures

International Realted Stories

International"More than a workplace": WHO DG as South-East Asia Regional Office inaugurated in New Delhi

InternationalJaishankar meets multi-party parliamentary delegations that represented India at UNGA

InternationalIndia, Netherlands agree to set up Joint Trade and Investment Committee; sign key MoUs during Dutch FM's visit

InternationalBangladesh on edge ahead of Sharif Osman Hadi funeral as protests, violence and security clampdown intensify

InternationalDhaka gripped by unrest as protests intensify after Osman Hadi death