Fourth, the country will more actively participate in the international division of labor and competitiveness. Fifth, the growth of service trade will be higher than that of goods trade. Sixth, exports and imports will be more balanced and the proportion of trade surplus in GDP will gradually reduce. Seventh, foreign trade will contribute more to the promotion of new industrialization, sustainable economic development and people's livelihoods, instead of promoting industrialization, GDP growth and employment.
Therefore, China has to adopt a new strategy and direction based on the "new normal". To begin with, it should cultivate a new engine for growth driven by innovation, which could be its new competitive edge, and establish a new trade and economic system to facilitate free flow of essentials.
To achieve these goals, the country has to take several measures.
For example, it should stabilize the export of labor-intensive goods and increase the export of high- and new-tech products, as well as help expedite the construction of international trade routes, including the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road, and strengthen institutional cooperation with countries along these routes. It also needs to adopt an import strategy that facilitates the import of advanced technology and key components, and stabilizes the import of energy and resources to meet Chinese people's demands.
Moreover, China has to gain new advantages in global competition and cooperation to promote the transformation and upgrade its labor-intensive industries. Plus, it should improve the trade policy to encourage domestic brands enterprises to become an integral part of the global value chain cooperation. And it should develop the service trade by exploring new frontiers of service trade cooperation.
Lastly, it needs a fair trade environment, for which it should resolve major trade conflicts with developed as well as developing countries through negotiations. It also needs to take measures to stop some countries from taking discriminative actions against it on one pretext or the other, including their attempts to bend the rules of the World Trade Organization to hurt China's foreign trade.
The author is a researcher with Foreign Trade Research Institution, Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation.
I’ve lived in China for quite a considerable time including my graduate school years, travelled and worked in a few cities and still choose my destination taking into consideration the density of smog or PM2.5 particulate matter in the region.