How to measure China’s true economic growth
In search of a successor to the Li Keqiang Index
When Li Keqiang, China’s prime minister, gave his final speech at the National People’s Congress on March 5th, it was already clear who would succeed him. But a successor has yet to be found for the “Li Keqiang index”. This unofficial proxy for China’s economic growth was inspired by a leaked conversation between Mr Li, when he was party secretary for the province of Liaoning, and an American diplomat. Mr Li confessed that the province’s gdp figures were “unreliable”. Instead, he focused on electricity consumption, rail cargo and bank lending. Taking our cue from Mr Li, this newspaper thought it would be fun to see what the three indicators, bundled into a single index, revealed about China’s economy at a national level.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Qiang Ker-ching”
Finance & economics
March 11th 2023- Can the West’s perplexing employment miracle continue?
- How to measure China’s true economic growth
- China’s Communist Party takes aim at hedonistic bankers
- New York’s stockmarkets are thrashing Hong Kong and London
- Lessons from finance’s experience with artificial intelligence
- Why commodities shine in a time of stagflation
- Emerging-market central-bank experiments risk reigniting inflation

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