Dual circulation
Dual circulation is an economic strategy of the People's Republic of China that designates domestic economic activity as the primary driver of growth, supplemented by international trade and investment to enhance internal development.[1][2] The strategy was formally proposed by Xi Jinping in May 2020 amid escalating U.S.-China trade tensions and the COVID-19 pandemic, aiming to insulate China's economy from external shocks by fostering technological self-reliance and expanding the domestic market.[3][4] It was enshrined in China's 14th Five-Year Plan (2021–2025), which emphasized innovation in sectors like semiconductors, artificial intelligence, and biomedicine to reduce import dependencies.[5][6] Under dual circulation, "internal circulation" focuses on boosting household consumption, urban-rural integration, and supply chain resilience, while "external circulation" prioritizes higher-value exports and selective global engagement.[7][8] Proponents argue it leverages China's vast domestic market—over 1.4 billion consumers—to achieve sustainable growth, with investments in key technologies yielding advancements in electric vehicles and 5G infrastructure.[3][9] Critics, however, contend that the policy promotes economic decoupling and protectionism, potentially diminishing global trade volumes and hindering foreign investment by favoring state-directed import substitution over open markets.[10][11] Empirical assessments indicate mixed progress: while domestic R&D spending has risen, consumer spending as a share of GDP remains subdued at around 38%, trailing export reliance, amid challenges like a property sector downturn and demographic aging.[3][12]Origins and Conceptual Foundations
Initial Proposal and Announcement
The concept of dual circulation was first formally proposed on May 14, 2020, during a meeting of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, presided over by Xi Jinping.[8] [13] The official communique from the meeting stated that China would accelerate the building of a "new development pattern" centered on a dual circulation framework, with the domestic economy serving as the "mainstay" while ensuring mutual reinforcement between domestic and international circulations.[1] [2] This marked the initial high-level articulation of the strategy amid external pressures including the U.S.-China trade tensions and the COVID-19 pandemic, which had disrupted global supply chains and export growth.[8] [14] Xi Jinping emphasized in the meeting the imperative to expand domestic demand and leverage China's vast internal market to drive economic resilience, rather than relying predominantly on foreign trade and investment.[13] [1] The proposal positioned internal circulation—encompassing production, distribution, consumption, and resource flows within China—as the primary engine for growth, with external circulation involving exports, imports, and foreign capital acting in a supportive role.[2] This shift was framed as a strategic response to foreseeable long-term challenges in the international environment, including technological restrictions and geopolitical frictions, though official statements avoided explicit attribution to specific foreign policies.[8] The announcement was disseminated through state media outlets like Xinhua, signaling its elevation to a core policy directive without immediate detailed implementation guidelines.[1] The proposal built on prior discussions of economic self-reliance but represented a novel synthesis under the dual circulation nomenclature, diverging from export-led models that had dominated since China's 2001 WTO accession.[14] Analysts noted that while the strategy echoed elements of Deng Xiaoping-era reforms emphasizing openness, its May 2020 framing prioritized endogenous drivers to mitigate vulnerabilities exposed by global disruptions, such as the 2018-2020 trade war tariffs that reduced China's export surplus by approximately 20% in affected sectors.[2] [8] No quantitative targets were specified in the initial announcement, leaving elaboration to subsequent planning processes.[13]Intellectual and Policy Precursors
The policy foundations of dual circulation emerged from responses to structural imbalances in China's export-led growth model, particularly after the 2008 global financial crisis exposed vulnerabilities to external demand shocks. In October 2008, Premier Wen Jiabao articulated the need to prioritize domestic demand expansion amid concerns over the U.S.-originated crisis, stating that China must "make a foothold in expanding domestic demand" through strengthened macroeconomic controls.[15] This led to the announcement of a 4 trillion renminbi (approximately $586 billion) stimulus package on November 5, 2008, which allocated funds primarily to infrastructure, affordable housing, rural livelihoods, and social welfare to invigorate internal production and consumption cycles, marking an early de facto emphasis on domestic economic circulation.[16][17] Subsequent five-year plans under the Hu Jintao-Wen Jiabao administration reinforced this shift; the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) explicitly targeted raising the share of domestic consumption in GDP from 48% in 2010 to around 50% by 2015, through measures like income redistribution and urbanization to address low household consumption rates averaging below 40% of GDP in the prior decade.[18] These efforts highlighted an intellectual recognition among Chinese policymakers of the unsustainability of investment- and export-heavy growth, with internal analyses as early as 2005 identifying the need for a "great internal cycle" to balance external dependencies, though implementation lagged due to entrenched state-led investment priorities.[9] Under Xi Jinping, these themes evolved into more targeted reforms. The supply-side structural reform initiative, first proposed by Xi at a December 2015 Central Economic Work Conference, focused on "cutting overcapacity, reducing inventory, deleveraging, lowering costs, and improving weak links" to streamline domestic supply chains and boost efficiency for internal markets, directly addressing excesses in heavy industries like steel (where capacity utilization fell below 70% by 2015).[19][20] Complementing this, the Made in China 2025 plan, released in May 2015 by the State Council, set goals for domestic firms to achieve 70% self-sufficiency in core components and materials by 2025, fostering technological independence as a bulwark against external supply disruptions—a core element later integrated into dual circulation's internal loop.[21][22] Intellectually, these policies drew from domestic economic discourse critiquing the "middle-income trap" risks, with state think tanks like the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences publishing reports in the early 2010s advocating rebalancing toward consumption-led growth to sustain 5-6% annual GDP expansion amid demographic aging and rising wages eroding export competitiveness.[3] This body of thought, informed by empirical data on consumption's stagnant GDP share (hovering at 35-40% from 2000-2015), provided the analytical groundwork for viewing domestic circulation as the "mainstay" while maintaining international engagement as secondary.[5]Theoretical Underpinnings from First Principles
The dual circulation strategy derives from core economic imperatives: an economy sustains growth through efficient flows of production, investment, distribution, and consumption, but large-scale systems like China's face binding constraints that necessitate prioritizing internal resilience over external dependencies. With a population exceeding 1.4 billion, China's domestic market offers inherent scale advantages for demand-led expansion, yet historical overreliance on exports—stemming from post-1978 reforms leveraging cheap labor—created vulnerabilities as demographic transitions depleted rural surpluses, elevated wages, and shifted comparative advantages away from low-end assembly.[8] External shocks, including U.S.-initiated tariffs from 2018 and supply chain disruptions during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, empirically demonstrated the risks of trade exposure, with China's trade-to-GDP ratio falling from 64.2% in 2006 to 31.8% by 2019.[8][5] Causally, low household consumption—comprising just 38.8% of GDP in 2019, hampered by income inequality and high precautionary savings—constrains internal circulation, while import dependencies in critical inputs like high-end semiconductors (domestic production at 15.7% in 2019) expose structural bottlenecks.[8] The strategy addresses these from first principles by fortifying domestic loops through supply-side reforms for technological self-sufficiency and demand-side measures such as social security enhancements to curb savings rates, enabling vertical integration and innovation testing within a vast home market.[8][5] This creates a self-reinforcing dynamic where internal expansion reduces external chokepoints, fostering productivity gains akin to structural economics models that emphasize adapting to evolving factor endowments rather than rigid global specialization.[7] External circulation serves as a supplement, importing complementary technologies and securing resource access via selective openness—such as Belt and Road engagements—while hedging geopolitical uncertainties like technology containment efforts.[5] Mutual reinforcement occurs through causal linkages: a robust domestic base attracts foreign direct investment for knowledge spillovers, enhancing global competitiveness without entrapment in volatile international cycles.[8] This framework pragmatically balances autarkic risks with globalization's benefits, grounded in empirical adaptations to labor scarcity and protectionism rather than ideological abstraction.[7]Core Components and Mechanisms
Internal Circulation: Domestic Market Dynamics
Internal circulation in China's dual circulation strategy positions the domestic market as the primary engine of economic growth, emphasizing the expansion of internal demand and the strengthening of domestic supply chains to achieve greater self-reliance and resilience against external disruptions. This approach leverages China's vast population and market size—over 1.4 billion consumers—to foster a virtuous cycle of production, distribution, and consumption within national borders, reducing vulnerability to global trade fluctuations. Policies under this framework target upgrading industrial capabilities, promoting innovation, and integrating urban-rural economies to create a more balanced and sustainable domestic economic loop.[1][8] A core dynamic involves boosting household consumption as a driver of demand, with measures such as income support for low- and middle-income groups and expanded social safety nets. In 2023, consumption expansion contributed 4.3 percentage points to overall GDP growth of 5.3%, accounting for over 80% of the year's economic expansion. By 2024, targeted policies included subsidies for consumer goods and services to stimulate spending, amid efforts to meet domestic demand with local sourcing, such as aiming for 45% of key inputs like iron ore and steel to be supplied domestically by 2025. However, household consumption remains below global averages by about 20 percentage points of GDP, reflecting persistent structural hurdles like the ongoing property sector crisis, which has eroded household wealth and confidence.[23][24][25] Supply-side dynamics focus on enhancing domestic production efficiency through technological self-sufficiency and supply chain localization, particularly in high-tech sectors, to support internal market needs without heavy external reliance. Initiatives include the 2020 Outline of the Plan for Expanding Domestic Demand, which promotes supply-demand matching via digital infrastructure and innovation in areas like advanced manufacturing. Private consumption supported over half of GDP growth in the first half of 2025, aided by fiscal measures, yet critics note that rebalancing toward consumption-led growth has been limited, with investment and exports still dominating due to insufficient structural reforms in areas like pensions and healthcare.[26][27][28] Urban-rural integration forms another key aspect, aiming to bridge disparities by channeling rural labor and resources into domestic consumption channels, such as through e-commerce platforms that have expanded retail access. Retail sales grew steadily post-2020, but the strategy's effectiveness is tempered by uneven implementation, with domestic demand expansion often prioritizing state-directed investment over organic consumer-led dynamics. Recent 2025 plans vow significant household consumption increases via tech innovation and policy incentives, though empirical progress remains incremental amid demographic challenges like aging and income inequality.[29][30][31]External Circulation: International Trade Role
External circulation in China's Dual Circulation strategy encompasses international trade, foreign investment, and global supply chain participation, serving as a secondary driver to bolster the domestic economy by exporting surplus production, importing essential resources, and acquiring advanced technologies. Formally articulated in the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025), it prioritizes "high-quality" external engagement, such as upgrading export structures toward high-tech goods like semiconductors and electric vehicles, while diversifying import sources to reduce vulnerabilities from single-country dependencies, exemplified by increasing crude oil imports from over 40 countries, with Russia supplying 15% in 2020. This approach assumes prolonged geopolitical tensions, advocating selective integration where beneficial—such as through controlled mechanisms—and detachment in strategic areas like critical technologies to foster self-reliance.[2][32] Key policies reinforce this role, including the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), signed on November 15, 2020, and effective January 1, 2022, which eliminates tariffs on up to 90% of goods among 15 Asia-Pacific nations, covering 30% of global GDP and facilitating China's access to regional markets for processed exports. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), ongoing since 2013 with over $1 trillion in cumulative investments, extends trade connectivity through infrastructure in 150+ countries, prioritizing resource extraction and logistics to secure supply chains, though it has faced debt sustainability critiques in recipient nations. Pursuit of Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) membership aims to further liberalize high-standard trade rules, while measures like promoting renminbi settlements and digital currency (e-CNY) seek to diminish dollar dominance in transactions. These initiatives position external circulation to feed internal growth by repatriating capital and knowledge, yet they operate under state-guided terms to align with national security priorities.[33][34] Empirical data underscores external circulation's outsized influence despite its supplementary framing: China's trade surplus expanded from $535 billion in 2020 to $878 billion in 2022 and $823 billion in 2023, with exports peaking at $3.718 trillion in 2022 amid declines in domestic consumption. Imports, while growing in volume for commodities, fell 2.2% year-over-year through mid-2025, yielding a partial-year surplus of $785 billion, as excess manufacturing capacity—particularly in steel, solar panels, and EVs—redirected toward global markets. Semiconductor imports alone reached $434 billion in 2021, highlighting persistent technological gaps. Foreign trade's GDP share hovered around 37% in 2023, higher than pre-2020 levels in relative terms, suggesting causal persistence of export-led dynamics due to internal loop constraints like subdued household spending (consumption at 38% of GDP in 2023 versus 55-60% in advanced economies). This trajectory indicates that, while policy seeks mutual reinforcement, weak internal demand has amplified external reliance, potentially exacerbating global imbalances rather than resolving them.[35][36][2]Integration and Mutual Reinforcement Strategies
The integration of internal and external circulation in China's dual circulation strategy emphasizes mutual promotion, wherein a robust domestic market serves as the mainstay to attract global resources, technology, and investment, while external engagement enhances domestic production capabilities and demand stability. This linkage aims to create synergies, such as leveraging China's large consumer base—estimated at over 1.4 billion people—to pull in foreign direct investment (FDI) and imports, thereby reducing vulnerabilities to external shocks like trade wars or supply chain disruptions. Official documents outline this as stimulating internal-external interactions through dynamic domestic markets that spur trade and resource inflows. Analyses from policy think tanks describe it as a hedged approach, balancing self-sufficiency with selective globalization to fortify resilience.[37][38][22] Key mechanisms include institutional reforms to align domestic and foreign trade systems, such as unifying standards for logistics, payments, and regulations to facilitate seamless cross-border flows. In 2021, China established pilot zones for domestic-international dual circulation in regions like Guangdong and Shanghai, testing integrated supply chains that link local production with global value chains. These efforts involve shortening the FDI negative list—reduced from 40 to 31 items in manufacturing by 2020—to encourage foreign firms to onshore advanced technologies, exemplified by Tesla's Shanghai Gigafactory (operational since 2019) and BASF's wholly owned chemical projects in Guangdong (approved 2018), which utilize domestic demand while transferring know-how to local partners. Such policies enable external circulation to reinforce internal capabilities by providing access to strategic inputs like semiconductors, countering import dependencies amid U.S. export controls.[39][40][22] Broader initiatives further mutual reinforcement: Participation in the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), signed in November 2020 and effective from 2022, integrates China's external trade networks with domestic markets by lowering tariffs on 90% of goods among 15 Asia-Pacific members, boosting exports while stabilizing import supplies for internal consumption. The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), ongoing since 2013, extends external infrastructure links to secure resource inflows (e.g., energy from Central Asia) that support domestic manufacturing self-reliance under programs like Made in China 2025. Fiscal incentives, including tax rebates for high-tech exports and subsidies for R&D collaborations, ensure that internal innovations—such as in electric vehicles—enhance export competitiveness, creating a feedback loop where external revenues fund domestic upgrades. These strategies, embedded in the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025), prioritize high-quality trade to turn China into a "trader of both quality and quantity," though implementation faces challenges like uneven regional integration and geopolitical tensions.[40][38][22]Implementation Strategies
Policy Reforms and Initiatives (2020-2022)
The dual circulation strategy was officially proposed in a meeting of the Political Bureau Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China Central Committee on May 14, 2020, positioning domestic economic circulation as the mainstay supported by international circulation to address external uncertainties and enhance internal resilience.[2] In August 2020, the State Council issued guidelines to accelerate the formation of this new development pattern, focusing on expanding domestic demand, optimizing supply structures, and integrating domestic and international markets through unified standards for trade and investment.[41] The Fifth Plenum of the 19th Central Committee in October 2020 incorporated dual circulation into the guidelines for the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025), emphasizing reforms to build a super-large-scale domestic market and achieve high-level self-reliance in science and technology.[12] Adopted by the National People's Congress in March 2021, the plan outlined key initiatives such as deepening supply-side structural reforms to innovate production modes, removing development bottlenecks in supply chains, and promoting coordinated urban-rural development to boost consumption and investment.[42] It targeted expanding the middle-income group to over 400 million people by enhancing income distribution and social safety nets, alongside reforming factor markets for land, labor, capital, technology, and data to improve resource allocation efficiency.[43] To support internal circulation, 2021 initiatives included a three-year action plan for state-owned enterprise reform, aimed at enhancing SOE competitiveness through mixed-ownership structures and market-oriented operations, with over 70% of central SOEs required to establish effective corporate governance by 2022.[9] Fiscal measures involved issuing 3.65 trillion yuan in special-purpose local government bonds in 2021 for infrastructure and domestic demand stimulation, while monetary policies maintained moderate liquidity to support consumption recovery post-COVID.[44] For external circulation integration, the national negative list for foreign direct investment was shortened from 40 to 31 items in 2021, easing access in manufacturing and services, though strategic sectors like telecommunications remained restricted.[45] In 2022, the National Development and Reform Commission released guidelines to unify domestic and foreign trade rules, reduce import tariffs on consumer goods and resources, and promote cross-border e-commerce to elevate export quality and value-added content, aligning with dual circulation goals of mutual reinforcement between cycles.[38] These efforts also advanced technological self-reliance through increased R&D investment, targeting basic research funding to rise to 8% of total national R&D expenditure by 2025, with initiatives like national laboratories for key technologies in semiconductors and biotechnology.[3] Despite these reforms, implementation faced challenges from uneven regional adoption and persistent supply chain dependencies, as noted in official assessments.[9]Technological and Industrial Self-Reliance Efforts
China's dual circulation strategy emphasizes technological and industrial self-reliance as a cornerstone of internal circulation, aiming to reduce vulnerabilities from external supply chain disruptions and technology restrictions imposed by the United States. Announced in May 2020 by President Xi Jinping, the strategy integrates prior initiatives like Made in China 2025, which targeted achieving 70% domestic content in core basic components and key materials for high-tech manufacturing by 2025, through state-directed investments and innovation mandates.[46][22] This shift responds to escalating U.S. export controls on advanced technologies, prioritizing "indigenous innovation" in sectors identified as "stuck necks" (cardinal bottlenecks), including semiconductors, artificial intelligence, and quantum computing.[5] Central to these efforts is the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025), which allocated significant resources to science and technology self-reliance, committing to breakthroughs in core technologies via increased R&D expenditures projected to reach 2.5% of GDP by 2025 and the establishment of national laboratories.[47][48] In semiconductors, China launched multiple phases of the National Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund, known as the "Big Fund," with the third phase raising over 300 billion yuan (approximately $42 billion) in 2024 to subsidize domestic firms like Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) for advancing 7-nanometer and below process nodes.[49] These funds support fab construction, equipment localization, and talent programs like the Thousand Talents Plan to repatriate expertise, aiming for 70% self-sufficiency in chip production by 2030 despite ongoing import dependencies.[50] Industrial self-reliance extends to strategic sectors such as new energy vehicles, biotechnology, and advanced materials, with policies mandating domestic sourcing and offering tax incentives for enterprises achieving "secure and controllable" supply chains under dual circulation guidelines.[51] The strategy promotes "new quality productive forces," including cluster development in hubs like the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region for AI and the Yangtze River Delta for integrated circuits, backed by over 1 trillion yuan in annual fiscal support for high-tech industries as of 2023.[52] Recent extensions in the 15th Five-Year Plan outline, approved in October 2025, pledge to "greatly increase" self-reliance capacity through accelerated commercialization of research outputs and international cooperation selective to national security priorities.[53][54]Fiscal and Monetary Measures
In support of the dual circulation strategy, China's fiscal policy shifted toward greater proactivity starting in 2020, emphasizing expanded public spending to stimulate domestic demand and investment in self-reliance sectors. The 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025) outlined maintaining a reasonable fiscal deficit ratio while prioritizing expenditures on innovation, infrastructure, and consumption enhancement, with annual R&D spending targeted to increase by 7% to foster technological independence.[37][55] Local governments were authorized to issue special-purpose bonds, rising from 3.75 trillion yuan in 2020 to 3.65 trillion yuan in 2021, directed toward projects bolstering internal circulation such as high-tech manufacturing and urban renewal. Tax and fee reductions were extended, including value-added tax cuts for small businesses and exemptions for domestic R&D, totaling over 2.5 trillion yuan in relief from 2020 to 2022, aimed at easing burdens on enterprises to prioritize the domestic market.[56] Monetary policy under the People's Bank of China (PBOC) adopted a "prudent" stance with easing elements to ensure liquidity for domestic economic activities, aligning with dual circulation by channeling credit to strategic sectors like advanced manufacturing and green industries. In 2020, the PBOC reduced the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 100 basis points cumulatively and lowered the loan prime rate (LPR) to historic lows, injecting over 5 trillion yuan in liquidity to support post-pandemic recovery and internal demand.[57] Through medium-term lending facility (MLF) operations and open market tools, the PBOC maintained ample money supply, with M2 growth averaging 9.5% annually from 2020 to 2023, directing funds via targeted lending to small and medium enterprises (SMEs) contributing to domestic circulation.[57] By 2025, further RRR cuts and rate adjustments in a 10-point stabilization package sustained low borrowing costs, though critics note persistent challenges in transmitting easing to consumption amid property sector woes.[58][59] These measures integrated fiscal expansion with monetary accommodation to reinforce internal circulation, evidenced by a fiscal deficit widening to 3.6% of GDP in 2021 from 3.0% in 2019, funding initiatives like the "Made in China 2025" extension for supply chain resilience.[60] However, empirical data indicate mixed efficacy, with domestic consumption's GDP share stagnating around 38-40% through 2024, suggesting structural limits in shifting from export-led growth.[61]Empirical Outcomes and Assessments
Macroeconomic Performance Metrics (2020-2025)
China's gross domestic product (GDP) grew by 2.3% in 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, rebounding sharply to 8.1% in 2021 as lockdowns eased and stimulus supported recovery.[62][63] Growth slowed to 3.0% in 2022 due to stringent zero-COVID measures that disrupted supply chains and consumer spending, before accelerating to 5.2% in 2023 with policy easing.[62] In 2024, official figures reported approximately 5.0% growth, though independent analyses estimated real expansion at 2.4% to 2.8%, citing discrepancies in data methodology and potential overstatement to meet targets.[64][65] For 2025 through the first half, GDP expanded by 5.3% year-on-year, driven by industrial output and exports, but with persistent weakness in domestic consumption.[66] The dual circulation strategy, emphasizing internal demand, aimed to elevate consumption's role, yet its share in GDP hovered around 38-40% through the period, below pre-2020 levels and far under global averages, reflecting structural hurdles like high savings rates and property sector distress.[67] Investment, particularly in infrastructure and manufacturing, sustained growth but fueled debt accumulation, with fixed-asset investment rising 3-4% annually post-2022.[68] Exports remained robust, contributing over 20% to GDP in 2024, underscoring limited progress in rebalancing toward domestic circulation amid global trade tensions.[69] Inflation, measured by the consumer price index (CPI), averaged 2.0% in 2020-2021 but turned deflationary thereafter, with -0.2% in 2023, -0.3% in early 2024, and persistent sub-1% readings into 2025, signaling weak demand and overcapacity. Urban unemployment stabilized at 5.1-5.3% officially from 2022 onward, though youth rates exceeded 15% in 2023-2024, prompting targeted interventions. The trade surplus widened to $877 billion in 2023 and over $900 billion in 2024, buoyed by high-tech exports, countering the strategy's intent to diminish external reliance.[35]| Year | GDP Growth (%) | CPI (%) | Urban Unemployment (%) | Trade Surplus (USD billion) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 2.3 | 2.5 | 5.0 | 535 |
| 2021 | 8.1 | 0.9 | 5.1 | 676 |
| 2022 | 3.0 | 2.0 | 5.6 | 878 |
| 2023 | 5.2 | -0.2 | 5.2 | 823 |
| 2024 | 5.0 | 0.2 | 5.1 | 900+ |
| 2025 (H1) | 5.3 | -0.1 | 5.0 | N/A |
Sectoral Impacts and Case Studies
The manufacturing sector experienced mixed outcomes under dual circulation, with high-tech manufacturing output rising 5.9% year-on-year from January to September 2020, outperforming broader industrial production at 6.9% for the same period, driven by state investments in domestic supply chains and innovation.[44] Equipment manufacturing grew 4.7% in the same timeframe, supported by policies enhancing logistics and 5G infrastructure as outlined in the National Development and Reform Commission's September 2020 plan.[44] [21] However, overall manufacturing investment declined 6.5% amid the shift from export reliance to internal demand, reflecting challenges in transitioning to consumption-led growth.[44] In high-technology sectors, dual circulation emphasized self-reliance, with investments in research and development surpassing the European Union's share of GDP by 2020, though trailing the United States; key bottlenecks persisted in semiconductors, where China held only 5.9% of global market share in 2020 despite RMB 344 billion (approximately USD 60 billion) allocated through national funds since 2014.[21] Semiconductor imports reached USD 434 billion in 2021, a 24% increase from 2020, underscoring limited progress in reducing foreign dependence amid U.S. export controls.[2] High-tech services saw robust growth, including 14.7% output expansion in integrated circuits and 9.1% investment rise in high-tech industries from January to September 2020.[44] The agriculture sector benefited from internal circulation's focus on domestic stability, with enhanced rural kinetic energy stimulated by policies promoting food security and green technology innovation under the dual framework; studies indicate that larger land circulation scales post-2020 supported ecological farming practices, though adoption of advanced technologies remained uneven due to quality constraints in land transfers.[70] [71] National strategies integrated dual circulation to bolster self-sufficiency in staples, reducing vulnerability to global supply disruptions.[71] Consumer goods and retail sectors aligned with efforts to elevate domestic consumption, which comprised 37.7% of GDP in 2020; retail sales of consumer goods declined 7.2% year-on-year from January to September 2020 but rebounded 3.3% in September, aided by subsidies rising to 45% of new economy support by 2020 from 33% in 2015, and February 2021 measures easing vehicle purchase restrictions.[2] [44] [21] Case Study: Electric Vehicles (EVs)The EV industry exemplifies dual circulation's integration of domestic demand and selective exports, with output surging 51% in September 2020 and capturing 42% of new energy vehicle market share from January to August 2020; policies under the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025) targeted 20% non-fossil fuel vehicle sales by 2025, fostering vertical integration in batteries and supply chains to minimize import reliance.[44] Domestic subsidies and infrastructure expansion drove adoption, while exports grew amid global demand, though overcapacity risks emerged by 2023.[44] [2] Case Study: Solar Panels
Solar photovoltaic manufacturing transitioned to dominance under self-reliance pushes, achieving 71% of global production share by 2020 from 15% in 2006, outpacing early leaders like Japan and Germany through state-backed R&D and scale efficiencies integrated with dual circulation's internal-external reinforcement.[21] This success reduced technology import needs but raised concerns over market distortions from subsidized overproduction.[21] Case Study: Semiconductors
Semiconductor self-reliance efforts highlighted persistent gaps, with dual circulation accelerating domestic foundry investments post-2020, yet import dependence intensified to USD 434 billion in 2021; initiatives like tax incentives for R&D (e.g., 2 million yuan deduction per 1 million yuan spent) aimed at closing the 5.9% market share deficit, but structural hurdles in advanced nodes limited breakthroughs by 2025.[21] [2] Progress remained incremental, reliant on foreign partnerships despite geopolitical tensions.[2]
Quantitative Indicators of Self-Reliance Progress
China's efforts to enhance self-reliance within the dual circulation framework emphasize quantifiable advancements in innovation inputs, intellectual property generation, and reduced external dependencies across strategic sectors. Research and development (R&D) expenditure as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) serves as a primary indicator, rising from 2.40% in 2020 to 2.64% in 2022, with the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-2025) targeting sustained annual growth of approximately 7% to foster indigenous capabilities.[72] This escalation aligns with state directives prioritizing science and technology self-sufficiency, though critics note that much of the increase stems from state-directed investments rather than market-driven efficiency.[73] Patent filings provide another metric of progress, with China accounting for a growing proportion of global intellectual property outputs; by 2020, its share of IP5 patents (filed at major offices including the USPTO and EPO) had nearly matched established leaders, driven by domestic applications that bolster technological sovereignty.[73] In 2023, China submitted over 1.6 million patent applications worldwide, exceeding totals from all other countries combined, with state-owned enterprises leading in influential filings that reduce reliance on foreign intellectual property.[74] However, assessments highlight that while volume has surged, the citation impact and novelty of these patents lag behind Western counterparts, suggesting partial rather than complete self-reliance.[75] Sector-specific domestic content and import substitution ratios further illustrate advancements. In high-tech manufacturing, reliance on imported inputs declined notably from 2020 to 2023 in areas such as electrical equipment and machinery, reflecting policy-induced localization under initiatives like Made in China 2025, which aimed for 70% self-sufficiency in core technologies by 2025.[52] For semiconductors, China's global foundry capacity share expanded to around 16% by 2023, supported by firms like SMIC, though dependence on foreign equipment for advanced nodes persists at over 80%, limiting full autonomy.[46] In energy, coal self-sufficiency remains near 90% due to abundant reserves, while oil import reliance hovered at 70-75% through 2024; food grain self-sufficiency stabilized above 95%, mitigating external vulnerabilities amid global disruptions.[44]| Indicator | 2020 Baseline | 2023/2024 Progress | Target (by 2025) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| R&D/GDP (%) | 2.40 | 2.64 (2022) | >2.5 with 7% annual growth | [72] |
| Global Patent Share (IP5) | ~40% (rising) | Near parity with leaders | N/A | [73] |
| Semiconductor Foundry Capacity Share | ~5% | ~16% | 20-25% domestic advanced production | [46] [76] |
| High-Tech Import Input Reliance | High (sector-specific) | Reduced in electrical/high-tech | 70% self-sufficiency | [52] [77] |