BEIJING—China announced a lower economic growth target for this year and promised to open more industries to foreign investors as it tries to make its slowing, state-dominated economy more productive.
The growth target of about 7 percent, down from last year’s 7.5 percent, is in line with efforts to create a “moderately prosperous society,” Premier Li Keqiang said in a report on Thursday to China’s ceremonial national legislature.
Actual economic growth last year was 7.4 percent, the lowest since 1990.
The ruling Communist Party is in the midst of a marathon effort to guide the world’s second-largest economy to slower but more self-sustaining growth based on domestic consumption and services.
It is trying to replace a worn-out model driven by trade and investment in construction and heavy industry that has left China’s air and water badly polluted.
“We need to maintain a proper balance between ensuring steady growth and making structural adjustments,” Li said in the report to the National People’s Congress.
The full session of the 2,964-member NPC usually is limited to endorsing policy decisions already made by the ruling party but serves as a platform to publicize reform initiatives and set a tone for government work.
Communist leaders say they are comfortable with the slowdown that President Xi Jinping, invoking an American phrase, has dubbed “the new normal.” But in a sign they are afraid of a politically dangerous spike in joblessness, they have tried to spur activity with two interest rate cuts since November and a reduction in business taxes.
Li promised to give entrepreneurs and foreign investors a bigger role in an economy that, after three decades of market-oriented reforms, still is dominated by government-owned banks, oil producers and other companies.
Beijing will cut in half the number of fields in service and manufacturing industries in which foreign investment is restricted, the premier said.
He gave no details but the change has long been sought by foreign companies that face a thicket of restrictions and feel increasingly unwelcome.
China’s growth has declined steadily since peaking at 14.2 percent in 2007. Much of that reduction was intentional as Beijing tried to cool inflation and a boom in construction and investment that fueled worries about rising debt.
Efforts to promote consumer spending have been slower to gain traction at a time when many workers worry about their financial futures.
The International Monetary Fund says growth could decline further to 7 percent this year and a Cabinet think tank, the Development Research Center, has said it could fall as low as 6 percent next year.
China’s slowdown has had global repercussions, cutting demand for iron ore and other commodities that helped to drive economic booms in Brazil, Australia and other countries. But if Beijing succeeds in building up a consumer market, that could boost demand for other imports from higher-quality food to Hollywood movies.