China NPC: Domestic Consumption Back As Top Priority, Says Citi
The renewed focus on domestic consumption is expected to stimulate economic activity and support sustained growth.

In a significant shift, China has placed boosting domestic consumption back as its top priority for 2025, according to Citi’s analysis of the outcomes of the National People's Congress.
Premier Li Qiang presented the Government Work Report for 2025 on Wednesday, outlining 10 key work tasks for the government, with a strong emphasis on consumption, technology development and supply-side reform.
Boosting domestic consumption has returned to the number one work task from number three last year. This shift underscores the importance of consumption as a major driver of the growth in the gross domestic product, especially in light of uncertainties surrounding exports due to tariff increases, Citi said in a note.
The renewed focus on domestic consumption is expected to stimulate economic activity and support sustained growth.
Technology development remains a critical focus, related to the number-two and number-three work tasks. China aims to increase the core output of its digital economy to account for around 10% of the GDP output.
This highlights the importance of technology-related sectors, with Chinese President Xi Jinping recently meeting key personnel from the private sector, particularly those from the internet, technology and electric vehicle industries, to endorse the government's stance on private enterprises, the brokerage added.
Supply-side reform has been added as the number four work task, primarily to address overcapacity in sectors like solar and basic materials. The reform includes state-owned-enterprise reform and aims to tackle issues arising from slower demand, a high base, more trade barriers and changes in the economic mix.
China has set 10 economic and financial targets for 2025, with five being similar to last year. Four targets, including food production and energy consumption cut per unit of the GDP output, deficit to the GDP ratio and special-purpose bond issuance, are more ambitious, Citi said.
The consumer-price-index target is lower compared to 2024. These targets reflect China's adoption of more ambitious monetary and fiscal policies to ensure sustained economic growth and social stability.
Citi's analysis suggests that Hong Kong's and China's major indexes do not appear expensive, trading around historical means. The brokerage notes that China's alternatives to the US' top tech stocks are trading at significantly discounted valuations.
Citi has added Anta to its H-share Top Buys list, given the renewed focus on consumption. The brokerage remains overweight on internet, technology, and transportation (tourism-related) sectors for profit growth.