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China Fiscal Pullback Signals Cautious Turn as Growth Support Becomes More Selective

Beijing, 23 June 2026 – China is showing signs of a more cautious fiscal stance as policymakers reduce the pace of deficit expansion for the first time since 2023, raising fresh questions over how Beijing intends to balance growth support with fiscal discipline.

The shift comes at a sensitive point for the world’s second-largest economy. China continues to face pressure from a prolonged property downturn, subdued household confidence, weak local government finances and uneven domestic demand. At the same time, policymakers are trying to avoid excessive borrowing while directing public resources towards strategic priorities such as technology, advanced manufacturing, infrastructure upgrades and industrial modernisation.

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Author

  • Rebecca Hsu is a Senior Economist and Lead Analyst for The Ledger Asia, focusing on the rapidly evolving financial landscapes of East and Southeast Asia. With a background in sovereign risk assessment and emerging market trends, Rebecca provides sharp commentary on trade dynamics, monetary policy, and the digital economy's impact on regional growth.

    Formerly a strategic advisor for major financial institutions in Hong Kong, she excels at translating complex macroeconomic shifts into actionable insights for investors and policymakers. Her work at The Ledger Asia centers on China’s economic transition and the burgeoning manufacturing hubs of ASEAN, ensuring readers stay ahead of Asia’s shifting financial tides.

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