China's NPC Signals Stable Yuan, Fiscal Expansion, and RWA Focus for Crypto Markets

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China’s National People’s Congress on March 5 outlined a stable yuan, record fiscal spending, and a strategic shift toward equity financing and real-world asset (RWA) markets, affecting the crypto market. The 4.5–5% growth target reflects a $20 trillion economy adding nearly $900 billion in output this year. Beijing reaffirmed loose monetary policy, including potential RRR and interest rate cuts, and emphasized a modernized industrial system and digital economy growth to 12.5% of GDP by 2030. The fear and greed index may react to these policy signals as capital flows adjust.

China’s National People’s Congress opened on March 5 with signals that will reshape crypto capital flows for years to come. A stable yuan, record fiscal spending, and a structural push toward equity financing and RWA markets — these are the numbers that matter for digital asset investors.

However, the headlines stopped at China’s growth target of 4.5–5%, the lowest range since 1991. They shouldn’t, because the math tells a bigger story.

A Small Percentage of a Very Large Number

China’s economy surpassed $20 trillion for the first time in 2025, cementing its status as the world’s second-largest economy. Even at the floor of the new target range, China still adds roughly $900 billion to global output this year. The Netherlands, Saudi Arabia, Poland, and Switzerland each run economies of roughly $1 trillion to $1.3 trillion, and China is generating nearly that much in new economic activity, on top of what it already has.

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In 2025, China contributed around 30% of total global economic expansion, reinforcing its role as the world’s primary growth engine. That share holds even if 2026 comes in at the lower end of the stated range. The rate of growth is decelerating, but the sheer weight behind it is not shrinking.

Why the Framing Matters for Markets

On the property side, Beijing stopped well short of a sweeping bailout. Policymakers pledged to coordinate orderly risk resolution across real estate, local government debt, and smaller financial institutions. The “white list” mechanism for housing projects continues, and unsold homes will be purchased for government-subsidised use — but there is no aggressive reflation of the sector. That measured stance keeps a lid on near-term expectations for iron ore and copper demand.

For crypto, Beijing’s broader policy package carries more signal than the growth target itself. China reaffirmed loose monetary policy and flagged RRR and interest rate cuts as active options going forward. Total general public budget expenditure hits 30 trillion yuan for the first time, with the overall deficit at 5.89 trillion yuan.

Macquarie’s chief China economist noted that if exports falter, Beijing will dial up domestic stimulus to defend the GDP target. The floor under Chinese liquidity is meaningfully higher than the headline growth figure suggests.

Yuan Stability Is the Real Signal

Beijing’s commitment to a basically stable yuan matters more than the growth number for near-term currency and crypto flows. Analysts see Beijing tolerating gradual yuan appreciation toward 6.70 against the dollar, while resisting sharper moves that would erode China’s hard-won competitive edge. A controlled, modestly stronger yuan reduces the pressure from capital flight that has historically driven Chinese retail demand toward Bitcoin and dollar-pegged stablecoins.

The 15th Five-Year Plan: Quality Over Speed

The annual growth target is only part of what the NPC unveiled on March 5. Beijing simultaneously released the 15th Five-Year Plan, setting the strategic framework through 2030. Previously, the headline theme was technological innovation; now, a modernized industrial system stands at the forefront, with innovation following directly after. The sequencing is intentional — turning lab breakthroughs into scalable production capacity, not just patents.

Central to the plan is an R&D spending target of more than 3.2% of GDP, a record high aimed at overcoming what Beijing calls “chokepoint” technologies. Advanced manufacturing, semiconductors, next-generation IT, and aerospace are the designated priority sectors.

The digital economy’s targeted share of 12.5% of GDP by 2030, combined with an embedded “AI-Plus” consumption model, is the number most relevant for crypto and digital asset markets. This planning cycle is less about acceleration and more about reengineering the vehicle itself — and at $20 trillion in scale, that vehicle is large enough that even a cautious rebuild moves global markets.

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