BEIJING, China (Journos News) – China’s latest economic blueprint underscores an expanding push for technology self-sufficiency, highlighting how Beijing views innovation as central to economic resilience and geopolitical competition with the United States.
The policy direction, outlined during China’s annual legislative session, places technological advancement at the heart of long-term economic planning while balancing near-term concerns about slowing growth and weak domestic demand. According to reporting by the Associated Press, the strategy forms part of a broader effort by Beijing to transform the world’s second-largest economy from a manufacturing powerhouse into a technology-driven industrial leader.
Industry analysts say the policy signals a sustained state-backed effort to secure control over critical technologies such as artificial intelligence, semiconductors and advanced manufacturing systems — sectors increasingly tied to national security and global economic influence.
China’s leadership has framed technological capability as essential to competing with the United States in areas ranging from trade to defense technology, reflecting an intensifying strategic rivalry shaping the global technology landscape.
Technology Strategy Takes Center Stage
China’s long-term planning framework emphasizes breakthroughs in several high-impact sectors, including artificial intelligence, quantum computing, biotechnology and advanced energy technologies.
RELATED POSTS
According to statements delivered during the annual session of the National People’s Congress, Chinese leader Xi Jinping urged policymakers to pursue “original innovation” and capture the “strategic high ground” in science and technology.
The five-year economic blueprint calls for accelerating research and industrial deployment in emerging technologies, alongside expanding domestic capabilities in robotics, battery manufacturing and next-generation communications infrastructure such as 6G networks.
Economists and technology policy analysts say the strategy reflects Beijing’s effort to move up the global value chain and sustain long-term growth as China transitions beyond its historical reliance on low-cost manufacturing.
U.S. Technology Restrictions Intensify Self-Reliance Push
The renewed emphasis on technological independence comes as export controls imposed by the United States continue to limit Chinese companies’ access to advanced semiconductor technologies.
Washington has introduced restrictions aimed at preventing the transfer of cutting-edge chips and related manufacturing tools that could support military or artificial intelligence development. These measures have become a central feature of the broader economic and strategic competition between the two powers.
In response, China has increased investment in domestic semiconductor development and other “core technologies,” aiming to reduce dependence on foreign suppliers.
The government’s economic plan explicitly calls for “fighting the battle for key core technologies,” reflecting Beijing’s view that control over critical components — including chips and advanced materials — will determine future economic competitiveness.
Semiconductor and Aerospace Projects Gain Strategic Priority
Beyond digital technologies, China’s planning framework identifies several strategic industries where state investment will expand.
Among them is the development of indigenous commercial aviation capabilities. Beijing plans to increase production of the COMAC C919 passenger aircraft while accelerating work on domestically produced jet engines.
The aircraft program has faced supply chain challenges after Western engine components were temporarily restricted during a previous escalation in trade tensions with the United States.
The plan also highlights rare earth elements — minerals crucial for electronics, batteries and defense systems — where China currently dominates global supply. Officials have signaled an intention to preserve that advantage even as other countries attempt to build alternative supply chains.
Domestic Demand Strategy Offsets Export Risk
While long-term policy emphasizes technology leadership, Beijing’s immediate economic agenda focuses on stabilizing growth as consumer confidence and business investment remain subdued.
The government’s annual economic plan sets a growth target between 4.5% and 5% for 2026, slightly below previous performance levels.
Officials say expanding domestic demand has become a priority as trade tensions and tariffs imposed during the administration of Donald Trump exposed vulnerabilities tied to China’s heavy reliance on exports.
China has recently redirected exports to alternative markets, but its record trade surplus — approaching $1.2 trillion — has sparked concern among trading partners over the potential impact on domestic industries and employment.
Industrial Policy Could Reshape Global Technology Competition
Economists say Beijing is likely to deploy substantial subsidies and state-backed financing to accelerate technological development across priority industries.
Research from Capital Economics indicates industrial policy will remain a key instrument supporting China’s technology ambitions and long-term economic transformation.
Similar government support previously helped China build dominant positions in solar and wind manufacturing, although it also created global oversupply that disrupted international markets.
Analysts warn that the same pattern could emerge in future technology sectors, potentially intensifying trade friction as China expands manufacturing capacity in high-tech industries.
For global technology markets, China’s latest economic blueprint reinforces a structural shift: innovation and industrial strategy are increasingly intertwined with geopolitical competition, supply chain security and national economic policy.














