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CAR intensifies fight vs violence against women, children

PHILSTAR

BAGUIO CITY — The Interior department in the Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) is actively pushing local government units (LGUs) to strengthen their programs to minimize and finally end violence against women and children.

The Department of Interior and Local Government Cordillera Regional Director Araceli A. San Jose profusely urged LGUs to enhance their campaign as the country is observing the National Children’s Month this November.

Data from the Cordillera police showed 281 cases of violence against children in the first 10 months of 2024. In 2023, there were 354 cases logged.

This includes victims of rape, exploitation, discrimination, and acts of lasciviousness.

Though Ms. San Jose noted a decrease in the number of cases of violence against children, the number is still alarming, prompting her to push for appropriate measures and interventions at the local levels.

She reiterated calls to enhance of the Local Communities on Anti-Trafficking and Violence Against Women and their Children and the Local Council for the Protection of Children in all villages in the Cordillera by arming them with ample knowledge and knowing their responsibilities in the implementation of laws on children-protection and welfare. — Artemio A. Dumlao

Lady Spikers battle Lady Bulldogs at Shakey’s Super League finals

BELLA BELEN of National University against De La Salle’s Shane Reterta and Amie Provido.

Game on Friday
(Rizal Memorial Coliseum)
6:30 p.m. – La Salle vs NU

BACK-TO-BACK champion National University (NU) and De La Salle University bring their UAAP rivalry to the Shakey’s Super League Collegiate Pre-Season Championship in the much-awaited Game 1 of the finale Friday at the Rizal Memorial Coliseum.

Hostilities fire off at 6:30 p.m. with the Lady Bulldogs looking to move closer to a coveted three-peat albeit against a strong resistance from their UAAP archrivals Lady Spikers, who went unbeaten until the finals.

NU and La Salle met twice in the UAAP finals, exchanging crowns in Seasons 84 and 85 but the Lady Bulldogs have been the undisputed queens in the Shakey’s tilt with perfect runs in two seasons.

La Salle though gained some measure of vengeance in the elimination rounds as it snapped NU’s 28-game, two-year run with a 32-30, 14-25, 25-22, 25-21 win.But the finale is an entirely different arena, looming to be a toss-up for the unarguably the country’s two best collegiate volleyball programs today with UAAP MVPs Bella Belen of NU and La Salle’s Angel Canino at the center stage.

Aside from Ms. Belen, Mr. Meneses will have back-to-back SSL MVP Alyssa Solomon to bank on along with the seasoned spikers in Vange Alinsug, Erin Pangilinan, Sheena Toring, Lams Lamina and rising star Arah Ella Panique from Alas Pilipinas.

La Salle, for its part, stands ready to whatever retaliation NU has in a fiery rematch since their titular showdown in 2022.

Spearheading the way for the Lady Spikers are Ms. Canino, SSL National Invitationals MVP Shevana Laput, Julia Coronel, Amie Provido and Baby Jyne Soreño. — John Bryan Ulanday

Biñan blasts Bacoor in Game 2 to earn a finals berth against Quezon at MPVA

BIÑAN VS BACOOR

Games on Monday
(Alonte Sports Arena)
4 p.m. – Rizal vs Bacoor (bronze medal match)
6 p.m. – Quezon vs Biñan (Game 1 of finals)

BIÑAN Tatak Gel 1-Pacman Partylist knocked off the favorite Bacoor side armed with a twice-to-beat advantage following a dominant 25-21, 26-24, 25-21 win in the deciding Game 2 of the 2024 Maharlika Pilipinas Volleyball Association (MPVA) semifinals on Wednesday night at the Alonte Sports Arena in Laguna.

Erika Jin Deloria led the way once again with 16 points on 15 hits and an ace as the No. 3 Volley Angels beat the second-seeded Strikers twice to gatecrash the finals of the MPVA founded by former Senator and MPBL chairman Manny Pacquiao.

Ms. Deloria fired the same output in Biñan’s 25-18, 25-18, 25-16 win on the road in Bacoor in Game 1 of the semifinals to force a do-or-die Game 2 at home.

This time around, she drew ample contributions from Shane Carmona and May Ann Nuique with 12 points each as the Volley Angels arranged a best-of-three championship showdown against No. 1 Quezon, which made short work of No. 4 Rizal in the other pairing.

Game 1 of the quick race-to-two series is on Monday with Biñan enjoying a homecourt advantage at the Alonte Sports Arena. The Tangerines then host Game 1 at the Quezon Convention Center on Wednesday and Game 2 at the South Quezon Convention Center in Gumaca on Saturday.

Biñan failed to win against Bacoor in two encounters in the elims but completed a reversal of roles when it mattered the most with convincing victories in two games without a single set surrendered.

For the second straight game, Bacoor spikers fired blanks as Cyrille Joie Alemeniana was the lone bright spot with 15 points in a surprised semis exit after ruling the inaugural but shorter edition.

Bacoor, however, sports a chance to not come home empty handed when it battles Rizal for the bronze medal. — John Bryan Ulanday

Several stars set to play at Unrivaled league, but not Caitlin Clark

CAITLIN CLARK — REUTERS

THOUGH Caitlin Clark has reportedly not signed to play, there is no lack of star power among the rosters unveiled by Unrivaled, a new 3-on-3 winter women’s basketball league, on Wednesday.

Unrivaled, co-founded by WNBA stars Napheesa Collier and Breanna Stewart, revealed the rosters as it prepares for its inaugural opening day on Jan. 17.

In addition to Collier and Stewart, reigning rebounding leader Angel Reese, second-leading scorer Arike Ogunbowale and several other WNBA All-Stars are set to play. Others include Aliyah Boston, Jewell Loyd, Dearica Hamby, Kahleah Copper, Alyssa Thomas and Brittney Griner.

ESPN reported on Wednesday that Clark will not play in the upstart league.

The league will feature six teams and 34 players, though a pair of teams will have each have a wild-card roster spot to fill. Players were put into six pods, with bigs, wings and guards in each pod. Unrivaled’s six coaches selected one player from each pod and assigned the player to one of the six teams. None of the coaches knew which team they would be assigned.

Aiming to supplement players’ income between WNBA seasons, the league promises the highest average salary in the history of women’s professional sports. Among the investors are Megan Rapinoe, Carmelo Anthony, Steve Nash and Alex Morgan.

A’ja Wilson and Sabrina Ionescu are among the WNBA stars who have yet to join Unrivaled. UConn star Paige Buecker signed an NIL deal with the league but will not participate in games this season. She’s the first NCAA athlete to have a stake in the ownership equity of a league.

Collier and Stewart’s teams will face off in the league’s opener on Jan. 17. The season will last eight weeks and culminate in the championship on March 17.

TNT will handle broadcasting duties, with games also appearing on TruTV and streamed on Max. TNT will air games on Monday and Friday nights, with Saturday night games airing on TruTV. — Reuters

Alonzo, CSB beat San Beda at NCAA men’s badminton final

JOSHUA HOEHNE-UNSPLASH

ALRON ALONZO rediscovered his groove late as he repulsed Krenz Valena in an epic 21-11, 12-21, 21-14 win that sealed College of St. Benilde (CSB) a 2-1 win over San Beda University and the NCAA Season 100 men’s seniors badminton title at the Centro Atletico in Cubao on Thursday.

CSB’s other win came in the first singles where Michael Garcia routed Mel de Vera, 21-17, 21-14, while San Beda equalized following a 21-14, 21-10 triumph by Arjay Lazareto and Joaquin Pollentes over Ronnie Mullet and Troy Oliveros in the doubles.

It was the Blazers second men’s seniors crown in the sport with the first coming nine years ago.

Earlier, San Sebastian College-Recoletos claimed its second straight juniors crown by blanking San Beda on wins by eventual MVP Seth Quiambao over Ron Ezekial Zakarias, 21-17, 21-8, in the singles and Giet Linaban and JV Lanuza over Adrien Villegas and Allen Lopina, 21-9, 21-12, in the doubles.

Meanwhile, in chess at the Ayala Malls Manila Bay, San Beda and Lyceum of the Philippines University arranged a title showdown after pulling off nail-biting victories in the Final Four Wednesday night.

The Lions fought the Jose Rizal University Bombers to a 2-2 standoff but took the win and the finals berth after finishing with a better tiebreak of having the higher board victory courtesy of Johann Cedrickl Gaddi on board three.

The Pirates, for their part, relied on the board four win of Jorge Delgado, Jr. to dethrone last year’s titlist University of Perpetual Help, 2.5-1.5, and advance to the finals where they hope to reclaim the title they last won four years ago.

San Beda is eyeing its first crown since winning 32 years ago. — Joey Villar

Brilliant Paolini leads Italy to fifth Billie Jean King Cup title

BILLIEJEANKINGCUP.COM

MALAGA, Spain — Jasmine Paolini put on a tennis masterclass to steer Italy to a fifth Billie Jean King Cup title as she beat Rebecca Sramkova 6-2, 6-1 in the second singles rubber to wrap up a 2-0 win over Slovakia in the final on Wednesday.

A year after Italy suffered a heartbreaking defeat to Canada in the decider and over a decade since their last title in 2013, the charismatic Paolini demolished Sramkova before celebrating wildly with her teammates and jubilant Italian fans, including men’s world number one Jannik Sinner.

Underdogs Slovakia, who had stunned Britain on their way to the final, never got going against an imperious Italy who got off the mark with Lucia Bronzetti’s dominant 6-2, 6-4 win over Viktoria Hruncakova in the opening match.

“It’s unbelievable, amazing, I don’t have words to describe how I feel right now, it’s just incredible,” an emotional Paolini said on court.

“I think we played an unbelievable week and I’m so proud of how we did it in every match. I’m very happy that this year we finally were able to bring the title back to Italy,” the world number four added.

Paolini fell to a 6-2, 6-3 defeat to Canada’s Leylah Fernandez in last year’s final in Seville.

Yet this time around the Wimbledon and Roland Garros finalist Paolini put in a commanding performance against the 43rd-ranked Sramkova, who tried to gut it out while suffering with cramp throughout the second set.

“I think last year Leylah (Fernandez) played really well, she played better than me. That’s the way it is sometimes in sports,” Paolini said.

“Today when I stepped on court I told myself that I was going to give 100%… If you win, you win. But if you lose you have to accept that. We are going to fight for every ball and today it went well for us.”

Italy’s perfect day started with a superb performance from 25-year-old Bronzetti, who was playing only her second BJK Cup singles match, following her debut win in the semi-final against Poland.

Bronzetti was firing rockets with her serve and dominated Hruncakova in two quick sets that lasted just one hour and 20 minutes. — Reuters

Celtics vs Cavs

All eyes were on the Celtics and Cavaliers as they did battle in Group play of the NBA Cup the other day. On one side were the defending champions, armed with an 11-3 slate that belied their dominance; all losses were by six points or less, with one dealt on overtime and the other by the slimmest of margins. On the other were the league leaders, sporting a pristine 14-0 record that underscored their capacity to be better collectively than the sum of their individual parts. All and sundry expected a humdinger at the Garden, and, as things turned out, all and sundry were rewarded accordingly.

To be sure, the Celtics asserted themselves early on, and appeared to be well positioned for victory at the half. The 19,156-strong TD Garden was rocking, and certainly buoyed the green and white to stay sharp in the third period. That said, the Cavaliers refused to give up even with the large deficit in hostile territory; as they did throughout their unbeaten run, they simply treated the match a sequence at a time. They made quick decisions, big or small, and continued to play to their strengths regardless of the score and despite their erstwhile inability to generate success.

Soon enough, what looked to be a blowout compelled even the Celtics’ diehard fans to stay on the edge of their seats. The Cavaliers’ comeback was on, and they managed to whittle the deficit — which grew to as many as 21 — down to five heading into the final canto. What ensued was a battle that looked more like one deep into the playoffs than a fifth into the regular season. The hosts were bent on protecting home turf, and the visitors saw fit to rise to the challenge.

In the end, the Celtics prevailed, a reflection of added experience delivering under pressure. All the same, the Cavaliers proved that they deserve to be counted among the NBA elite. And, what’s more, they underscored their primacy by running roughshod over the Pelicans yesterday. Under new head coach Kenny Atkinson, they’re playing fast, loose, and, most importantly, free — and the results have been nothing short of remarkable. Able to hold their end on both sides of the court, opponents would do well not to underestimate them. They’re for real, period.

 

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

Indian billionaire Adani charged in US with bribery

GAUTAM ADANI — EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG

GAUTAM ADANI, the billionaire chair of Indian conglomerate Adani Group and one of the world’s richest people, has been indicted in New York over his role in a $265-million bribery scheme, according to US prosecutors.

US authorities said Adani and seven other defendants, including his nephew Sagar Adani, agreed to pay the bribes to Indian government officials to obtain contracts expected to yield $2 billion of profit over 20 years, and develop India’s largest solar power plant project.

A judge has issued arrest warrants for Gautam Adani and Sagar Adani and prosecutors plan to hand those warrants to foreign law enforcement, court records show.

Prosecutors also said the Adanis and another executive at Adani Green Energy, former Chief Executive Officer Vneet Jaain, raised more than $3 billion in loans and bonds by hiding their corruption from lenders and investors.

Gautam Adani, Sagar Adani and Jaain were charged with securities fraud, securities fraud conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy, and the Adanis were also charged in a US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) civil case.

Fallout for the Adani empire, which was rocked by a short-seller attack in February 2023, was immediate with shares in conglomerate’s listed companies stocks tumbling between 10% and 20%.

Adani Green Energy also cancelled plans on Thursday to raise $600 million in US dollar-denominated bonds. The bond had been priced but was pulled following the news.

Adani dollar bonds slumped in Asian trading, with prices down between 3% and 5% on bonds for Adani Ports and Special Economic Zone. The falls were the largest since the Adani Group came under a short-seller attack in February 2023.

According to an indictment, some conspirators referred privately to Gautam Adani with the code names “Numero uno” and “the big man,” while Sagar Adani allegedly used his cellphone to track specifics about the bribes.

The Adani Group has not responded to requests for comment.

Gautam Adani, Sagar Adani and Jaain were charged with securities fraud, securities fraud conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy, and the Adanis were also charged in a US SEC civil case.

Five other defendants were charged with conspiring to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, a US anti-bribery law, and four were charged with conspiring to obstruct justice.

None of the defendants is in custody, a spokesperson for U.S. Attorney Breon Peace in Brooklyn said. Gautam Adani is believed to be in India.

Gautam Adani, 62, is worth $69.8 billion according to Forbes magazine. He is one of the few billionaires formally accused in the United States of criminal wrongdoing. — Reuters

Apple makes $100-million investment proposal for new plant in Indonesia

APPLE.COM

JAKARTA — Tech giant Apple has made a $100 million investment proposal to Indonesia to build a plant to manufacture accessories and components, the industry ministry said on Wednesday.

The proposal comes after Indonesia banned sales of Apple’s iPhone 16 over the firm’s failure to meet local rules on components. Indonesia requires certain smartphones sold domestically to comprise at least 40% locally made parts.

The trade ministry will meet on Thursday to discuss Apple’s proposed West Java plant, its spokesperson Febri Hendri Antoni Arif said in a statement.

“By holding a meeting on Thursday, this means that the industry minister welcomes Apple’s investment commitment,” he said.

Apple has no manufacturing facilities in Indonesia, but has since 2018 set up application developer academies with a combined cost of 1.6 trillion rupiah ($99 million).

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for confirmation.

Indonesia has also banned sales of smartphones made by Alphabet’s for a similar reason. — Reuters

Is climate change making tropical storms more frequent? Scientists say it’s unclear

LARGE WAVES can be seen at Bagasbas Beach in Daet, Camarines Norte, due to Super Typhoon Pepito, Nov. 17, 2024. — PHILIPPINE STAR/RYAN BALDEMOR

SINGAPORE — An unusual cluster of typhoons in the West Pacific and a series of powerful hurricanes in the Atlantic are raising questions about the impact that climate change is having on tropical storms across the globe.

As nations thrashed out the details of a new climate financing package at the Conference of the Parties (COP29) talks in Azerbaijan, the Philippines was hit by its sixth deadly typhoon in a month while the United States was recovering from two devastating hurricanes.

Scientists say it remains unclear how much climate change is reshaping the storm season, or if it is responsible for the rare appearance of four tropical cyclones at the same time in the West Pacific — the first time this has happened in November since 1961.

Higher sea surface temperatures speed up evaporation and provide additional “fuel” for tropical cyclones, boosting rainfall and wind speeds, they say.

And the latest assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), published in 2023, expressed “high confidence” global warming would make storms more intense.

The Philippines’ latest Super Typhoon Man-Yi landed on Saturday, forcing the evacuation of hundreds of thousands of residents. At least eight people died on Monday, adding to a death toll of more than 160 since October.

“It is rare to see a cluster of four tropical cyclones in the western north Pacific at the same time,” said Feng Xiangbo, a tropical storm researcher at Britain’s University of Reading.

“(But) blaming climate change… for this unprecedented event this week is not straightforward,” he added.

Evidence suggests that while climate change is increasing storm intensity, it has also reduced their frequency, especially during what is typically the late season from October to November, Feng said.

This year, atmospheric waves that have recently been active near the equator could be an alternative explanation for the unusual uptick, Feng said, but their relationship with climate change is unclear.

The belt of high pressure known as the sub-tropical ridge, part of the global atmospheric circulation system, has been stronger and stretched further north and west than usual, according to Choy Chun Win, Senior Scientific Officer at the Hong Kong Observatory.

The ridge could have steered the storms in a westerly direction, diverting them away from cooler waters and wind shears, which would normally weaken them, providing an explanation why four could coexist, he said.

“However, more research is required to assess the contribution of climate change to the chance occurrence of the multiple tropical cyclones and the longer tropical cyclone season,” he added.

Ben Clarke, weather researcher with London’s Grantham Institute on Climate Change and Environment, said it “would make sense” that rising ocean temperatures would extend the typhoon season, but the evidence is not conclusive.

“There has been a clear recent increase in the number of tropical cyclones affecting the Philippines in its less active season from approximately December to February, but this doesn’t tell us much about … June-November,” he said.

STRONGER HURRICANES
In an analysis published on Wednesday, U.S. weather researchers Climate Central said Atlantic hurricanes have intensified significantly this year as a result of record-breaking ocean warming.

Since 2019, warmer temperatures have driven average wind speeds up by 18 miles per hour (29 kph) and pushed three hurricanes into the highest Category 5, the study said.

The two deadly Category 5 hurricanes known as Helene and Milton, which hit Florida in September and October respectively, would have been unlikely without climate change, it said.

Research is still ongoing on whether tropical cyclones are becoming more frequent, but there is high scientific confidence that warmer sea temperatures are driving up rainfall and causing higher storm surges, said Daniel Gilford, Climate Central’s lead hurricane researcher.

“While other factors contribute to each storm’s strength, the impacts of elevated sea surface temperatures are prominent and significant,” he said.

“In the Atlantic, more than 80% of storms since 2019 were clearly influenced by warm ocean temperatures caused by carbon pollution.” — Reuters

Angela Merkel, in memoir, recalls tricks for dealing with Donald Trump

BERLIN — Angela Merkel sought advice from the pope on dealing with Donald J. Trump when he was first elected US president, hoping to find ways of convincing a man she saw as having a property developer’s winner-or-loser mentality not to quit the Paris climate accords.

In her memoir, extracts of which were published in German weekly Die Zeit late on Wednesday evening, the long-serving German chancellor detailed her difficulties in dealing with Trump, who, she said, appeared to her fascinated by Russian President Vladimir Putin and other authoritarian leaders.

“He saw everything from the perspective of the property developer he was before entering politics,” she wrote. “Each parcel of land could only be sold once, and if he didn’t get it someone else did. That’s how he saw the world.”

Pope Francis, when Ms. Merkel asked him, in general terms, for advice on dealing with people “with fundamentally different views,” immediately understood she was referring to Mr. Trump and his desire to quit the climate accords, she wrote.

“Bend, bend, bend, but make sure it doesn’t break,” he told Ms. Merkel, according to her account.

When Mr. Trump first took office in 2017, Merkel was one of the world’s longest-serving elected leaders and the most influential in the European Union by far after having shaped Germany and the continent’s response to the euro zone debt crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s initial 2014 invasion of Ukraine.

As much of the world fretted over Mr. Trump’s presidency, Ms. Merkel’s unruffled demeanor and her frequent invocations of values like freedom and human rights led to some dubbing her the true “leader of the free world” — a moniker traditionally reserved for US presidents.

Written before Mr. Trump’s reelection, the book expresses the “heartfelt hope” that Vice-President Kamala Harris would defeat her rival.

Her memoir, entitled Freedom: Memories 1954-2021 will be published in more than 30 countries on Nov. 26. She will launch the book in the US a week later at a Washington event with former President Barack Obama, with whom she forged a close political relationship.

Germany’s first female leader was still popular with voters at the end of 16 years in office, but her legacy has come under greater scrutiny, with some blaming the huge bets on Russian energy made by her governments for both Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 and Germany’s current economic doldrums.

Ms. Merkel herself has expressed no regret about her Russia policies and kept a low profile since leaving office.

In the published extracts of her memoir, she discusses her many encounters with Mr. Putin, describing how he struck her as a man desperate to be taken seriously.

“I experienced him as someone who didn’t want to be disrespected, ready to lash out at all times,” she wrote. “You might find that childish and contemptible, you might shake your head at that. But it meant Russia never vanished from the map.”

At one point she appears to suggest that Putin’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine was timed to follow her departure from office. “You won’t always be Chancellor, and then they’ll join NATO,” he said of Ukraine. “And I want to prevent that.”

Some Central and Eastern European leaders, she added, had been guilty of wishful thinking: “They seem to want the country to just disappear, to not exist. I couldn’t blame them… But Russia, heavily nuclear armed, did exist.” — Reuters

Advisers favor 2025 China growth target of around 5%

Workers inspect dual-mass flywheels at the production line during an organized media tour to an auto parts factory in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China June 27, 2024. — REUTERS

BEIJING — Chinese government advisers are recommending that Beijing should maintain an economic growth target of around 5.% for next year, pushing for stronger fiscal stimulus to mitigate the impact of expected U.S. tariff hikes on the country’s exports.

The ambition to sustain a growth pace that seemed difficult to reach throughout 2024, if confirmed, would surprise financial markets betting on a gradual slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy as trade tensions intensify.

Four of the six advisers who spoke with Reuters favor a 2025 target of around 5%. One adviser recommends a goal of “above 4%” and another suggests a 4.5-5% range. A Reuters poll this week predicted China will grow 4.5% next year, but also tipped that tariffs could impact growth by up to 1 percentage point.

The advisers, who do not participate in decision-making, will submit their proposals to the closed-door annual Central Economic Work Conference next month, when top leaders discuss policies and goals for next year.

The target, one of the most closely watched indicators globally for clues of Beijing’s near-term policy intentions, will not be officially announced until an annual parliament meeting in March.

The recommendations of the advisers are considered by policy makers in the final decision-making process. The most popular view among the advisers is usually adopted although it is not always the case. Any plans could still change before the legislative session.

Most advisers commented on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the media.

Holding lofty growth goals in the face of threatened tariffs in excess of 60% on Chinese goods imports from incoming US President Donald Trump suggests Beijing is ready to spend big, particularly if it cannot negotiate lower levies or delay them.

“It’s entirely possible to offset the impact of Trump’s tariffs on China’s exports by further expanding domestic demand,” said Yu Yongding, one of the advisers and a government economist who advocates for a roughly 5% goal.

“We should adopt stronger fiscal policy next year,” said Yu, adding the budget deficit “should definitely exceed” this year’s planned level of 3% of gross domestic product (GDP).

Some economists have urged Beijing to ditch or adopt lower growth targets to reduce its reliance on stimulus, which has fuelled property bubbles and huge local government debts. But advocates for ambitious targets argue they are crucial for safeguarding China’s global stature, national security, and social stability.

President Xi Jinping’s vision of “Chinese-style modernization” envisages doubling the size of the economy by 2035 from 2020 levels, potentially surpassing that of the United States. Economists outside China do not believe that goal is realistic, but it still influences domestic policy discussion.

“To meet the 2035 goals, we need to achieve economic growth of around 5% in 2025,” said a second government adviser.

It is not known how many such proposals the government receives.

VULNERABLE EXPORTS
International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva warned last month that China’s growth could slow “way below 4%” unless it shifts from an export- and investment-led economic model to one driven by consumer demand.

The tariff threat has rattled China’s industrial complex, which sells goods worth more than $400 billion annually to the United States. Many manufacturers have been shifting production abroad to escape tariffs.

Yu downplayed Mr. Trump’s threat, noting that China’s net exports’ GDP contribution is minor. They accounted for 2.2% of GDP in 2023 although gross exports made up close to 20% of total economic output, official data show.

Other economists argue that industrial output, revenues, investment and jobs depend heavily on external demand and that additional trade barriers could exacerbate deflationary pressures and growth headwinds.

“If China’s exports take a hit and cannot be offset by rising domestic demand, deflationary pressures will intensify,” said the adviser recommending a target of “above 4%.”

The adviser who proposed 4.5-5% said: “The pressure on the economy will be even greater next year. Our exports could be greatly affected.”

MORE STIMULUS?
This month, China unveiled a 10 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion) debt package to ease municipal financing strains, but refrained from direct fiscal stimulus. Analysts say Beijing may want to keep the powder dry until Mr. Trump makes his first move.

Finance Minister Lan Foan said more stimulus measures were in the pipeline, without giving details on size or timing.

Government advisers say China’s budget deficit could spike to 3.5-4% of GDP next year and more special treasury bonds, typically not included in annual budgets, could be issued to fund infrastructure and other investment.

They say consumer-focused policies could include stronger financial support for low-income residents and expanding a subsidy scheme introduced this year to boost purchases of appliances, cars and other goods. Large scale cash voucher handouts are unlikely, the advisers say.

But they also urge officials to push ahead with promised tax, welfare and other policy changes to address structural imbalances.

“If reforms stall and we rely solely on policy stimulus, it will not be sustainable in the long run,” said the most conservative adviser. — Reuters