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China's Monetary Policy and Digital Assets: Updated Strategic Course for 2025-2030
In spring 2025, the Chinese leadership outlined a new course for economic development that will shape global capital flows in the coming years. Central to this course is strengthening human capital, digital assets, and innovative infrastructure—factors directly impacting cryptocurrency markets and demand for digital financing tools.
Official growth targets of 4.5–5% drew attention to a slowdown in development pace. However, behind these figures lies a much larger story of transformation in China’s economy and its interaction with global financial systems.
Economic Scale as the Foundation of Influence
China’s economy surpassed $20 trillion for the first time in 2025, cementing its status as the second-largest global economy. Even at the lower end of the target range, China adds about $900 billion to global output—an amount exceeding the GDP of entire nations. For comparison: the Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Poland, and Switzerland each have economies ranging from $1 to $1.3 trillion. China generates nearly the same amount of new economic activity, solely from its existing base.
China’s contribution to global growth is about 30%, despite the slowdown. This share remains stable even if 2026 indicators hit the minimum of the forecasted range. Economic expansion is decelerating, but its absolute scale does not shrink—and this is critical for understanding global market dynamics.
Monetary Policy and the Stability of the Yuan: Keys to Crypto Flows
More important than growth figures is Beijing’s adopted soft monetary policy stance. Chinese authorities confirmed readiness to lower reserve requirement ratios and interest rates, creating a favorable environment for capital movement into financial markets, including digital assets.
Macquarie’s chief economist noted that if export growth slows, Beijing will intensify domestic stimulus to protect GDP targets. This means liquidity bottom in China’s financial system is significantly higher than official figures suggest.
At the same time, the policy of strengthening the yuan gains particular importance. Analysts believe Beijing is allowing the yuan to gradually appreciate to around 6.70 per US dollar, while resisting sharp fluctuations that could undermine China’s export competitiveness. Controlled, slightly stronger yuan appreciation reduces capital outflow pressures—a process that has historically stimulated retail investors’ demand for bitcoin and stablecoins pegged to the US dollar.
Yuan stability is not just a macroeconomic indicator but a signal that influences cryptocurrency market participants’ behavior over the coming quarters.
Fiscal Tools and Transition to Market-Based Financing
China’s national budget reached a record 30 trillion yuan in 2025, with a total deficit of 5.89 trillion yuan. But more important than the size is the structure of spending and its focus. Beijing has clearly moved away from large-scale bailouts of the real estate sector, instead coordinating orderly risk management in this area. The housing project selection mechanism remains in place, with the government selectively acquiring unsold properties for social use. This conservative but controlled strategy avoids creating credit distortions.
A more strategic shift involves reorienting from state financing toward market instruments and financing through equity issuance. This change creates demand for digital financial tools, including RWA (tokenized real assets) and other crypto applications.
The 15th Five-Year Plan: Quality of Innovation Over Speed of Growth
Alongside annual targets, Beijing published a strategic development document extending to 2030. The fundamental change is a shift from pure technological innovation to systemic modernization of industry. Innovation remains a priority but now as a tool for scalable production rather than just academic achievement.
The government set a target R&D expenditure share of over 3.2% of GDP—an all-time high for China—aimed at overcoming technological bottlenecks in semiconductors, advanced manufacturing, and next-generation information systems. The aerospace sector also receives prioritized funding.
For participants in cryptocurrency and digital markets, the most significant goal is reaching a 12.5% share of the digital economy in GDP by the end of the decade. Integration of AI scenarios into consumption models will increase demand for digital platforms, smart contracts, and crypto infrastructure supporting these systems.
This macroeconomic planning cycle is less focused on short-term acceleration and more on rethinking the very mechanism of the economic system. With a scale of $20 trillion, even cautious structural transformation creates ripple effects across global financial markets, including digital asset markets.