Treasurer Jim Chalmers flew into Beijing amid a flurry of economic activity by authorities this week.Credit:Lisa Visentin
But with few concrete details available,including how much money China may be prepared to shell out on any fiscal stimulus package to stabilise its property sector,Chalmers said it remained to be seen what impact the government’s intervention would have.
“I wanted to make it really clear,we welcome efforts to boost growth in the Chinese economy,” said Chalmers,the first Australian treasurer to visit China in seven years.
“What happens here and what is decided here has big consequences for our own economy,our own workers and businesses and investors,and for our country more broadly. We do have a lot at stake,and we do have a lot to gain when it comes to the engagement and the stabilisation of the relationship with China as well.”
Chalmers flew into Beijing amid a flurry of economic activity by authorities this week,signalling increasing alarm among the country’s leadership about the free-falling property sector,flatlining consumer confidence and the widespread expectation that China will fall short of its 5 per cent annual growth target.
The China live export ban is crippling the Australian rock lobster industry. There are fears some fishers will not survive the winter months.Credit:AP
Australia’s Treasury is forecasting that China’s growth will remain below 5 per cent for three years,marking the weakest expansion streak since it began opening up in the late 1970s.
Chalmers warned this would have major consequences for Australia’s economy,with a 1 percentage point drop in China’s GDP growth roughly costing Australia about $6 billion in lost output.