China has made reform its top priority for 2014 but the question as to how to accelerate comprehensive reform while maintaining steady economic growth will test the new government.
For NPC deputies and CPPCC members, what they say in the discussions or in their motions should be based on careful investigations or research they have conducted.
The early stages of China's reform have already been set in motion, and further reforms such as boosting consumer demand and wider opening up to foreign investment are to be hoped for, a leading US economist told Xinhua.
The annual sessions of the National People's Congress and the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, starting from next week, are much-anticipated events.
"China's newest urban residents - its migrant workers - have jobs to sustain themselves. But they are not entitled to the social benefits in the cities they work in."