China Targets $14.7 Trillion Services Sector by 2030
By Reuters | 21 Apr, 2026
Hoping to create a more consumption-based economy, China unveiled plans to grow the service sector to 100 trillion yuan by 2030, about 12% less than the size of the current US service sector.
China has unveiled plans to expand its services sector to 100 trillion yuan ($14.67 trillion) by 2030 and upgrade service quality, as it seeks to boost the sector’s role in job creation and consumption.
Growth will be driven by demand, reform, tech innovation and greater openness, while institutional barriers will be removed and market forces better aligned with government support, the State Council said in a policy document issued on Tuesday.
“By 2030, notable progress will be achieved in the high-quality development of the services sector, with the sector’s total size reaching the 100 trillion yuan mark,” the cabinet said, adding it aims to foster more globally competitive and internationally recognised “China Services” brands.
China's services sector grew 5.4% year-on-year to 80.89 trillion yuan in 2025, official data shows.
The policy aims to better leverage the services sector’s role in supporting industrial upgrading, meeting people’s livelihood needs and expanding employment.
The plans will focus on strengthening business services such as R&D, logistics, software, supply‑chain finance and green services, while upgrading consumer sectors including retail, healthcare, elderly care, childcare, tourism and culture.
Authorities also pledged stronger fiscal and financial support, including loan interest subsidies, relending tools, government investment funds and wider use of services‑sector real estate investment trusts (REITs).
Earlier this month, President Xi Jinping called for a demand-driven approach coupled with reform and technological empowerment to develop the service sector.
Beijing has been signalling a policy shift to focus on services this year as it tries to redirect some stimulus from sometimes-wasteful investments on transport, housing and industrial infrastructure to potentially more productive areas.
Soft consumer demand has hobbled the economy and Beijing's measures so far haven't turned it around.
China’s services spending has outpaced goods consumption growth in recent years but still lags far behind developed economies. Per‑capita services consumption accounted for 46.1% of total consumption in 2025, well below the roughly 70% seen in the United States.
China's new five-year plan pledged to "significantly" raise the share of household consumption in the economy over the next five years from around 40% at present, though it stopped short of setting a specific target.
($1 = 6.8159 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Kevin Yao; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )
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