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China protests could usher in ‘more authoritarian’ Xi era, analyst says


Police form a cordon during a protest against Chinas strict zero COVID measures on November 27, 2022 in Beijing, China.

Kevin Frayer | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The eruption over the weekend of protests in China could mark the start of a “more authoritarian” era in President Xi Jinping’s rule, one analyst warned Monday, as Beijing appeared to reach a critical crossroads in its zero-Covid strategy.

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of major cities on Saturday and Sunday to demonstrate against China’s stringent Covid-19 measures, which have seen lockdowns, mass testing and widespread restrictions persist almost three years since the onset of the pandemic.

The protests present one of the most outward rejections of the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) authority in decades, and a clear affront to Xi’s signature “zero-Covid” policy, TS Lombard’s chief China economist told CNBC Monday.

“They are widespread and, crucially, [they are] the first protests in a very long time that are going against a central government policy — and one that is very closely associated with Xi Jinping. So they are incredibly significant,” Rory Green told CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe.”

Rising pressure on Xi

While Green said it was important not to “over extrapolate” the weekend’s events, he added that it could pile the pressure on the Chinese leader to clamp down on dissent.

“It raises the pressure on Xi Jinping, and I think likely puts him towards a more authoritarian approach to governance in China,” Green added.

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That will add downward pressure to the country’s already struggling economy. As of the third quarter, China’s growth for the year was just 3%, well below the official target of around 5.5%.

TS Lombard’s Green said he thinks it is unlikely that real GDP growth will surpass 1% over the coming six months, as the county struggles to emerge from its “Covid coma.”

“The upshot for the economy is bleak. We think China stays in this Covid coma until at least Q2 2023,” he said.

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