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IF THERE WAS any doubt that shoring up the fragile recovery was the primary domestic concern of Xi Jinping, it ought to have been erased by new and consequential steps to . Nor was symbolism neglected: A jaunt across town to the central bank suggests the president wants every part of the powerful state machinery aligned to meet a growth target once criticized for its lack of ambition.

Shifts in fiscal policy aren鈥檛 often riveting stuff, but the changes unveiled by Beijing on Tuesday are significant. By allowing the deficit to exceed the traditional limit of 3% of gross domestic product, China鈥檚 legislature green lit a notable boost in spending. Mid-year course-corrections have typically been reserved for calamitous times, such as the peak of the global financial crisis in 2008, the Asian meltdown a decade earlier, and natural disasters. Does that mean lawmakers, who rarely buck the leadership鈥檚 desires, believe growth is hanging by a thread? Not quite, according to recent data.

The economy showed signs of last quarter. GDP climbed 4.9% from a year earlier, beating forecasts, retail sales jumped and the jobless rate retreated a touch. Officials declared the annual growth target of around 5% to be very doable. Economists concurred, but cautioned that the figures didn鈥檛 warrant enormous praise. Remember when the goal, , was derided as a low-ball number? Surely, China ought to do better, went the thinking, considering the lift that was bound to come from ending COVID Zero. Then things began to slide; consumer prices even retreated over the summer, touching off a . Notching an expansion of 5% would be a relief. As a way of inspiring confidence, it would fall short. There鈥檚 little chance of overheating or inflation staging an unwelcome acceleration.

That鈥檚 what gives the legislature鈥檚 pump-priming its appeal. 鈥淭he budget revision represents a meaningful surprise from Beijing,鈥 Citigroup economists wrote in a note. 鈥淧olicy seems to ride on the activity momentum in order to shore up the weakening confidence鈥 we are not in a 鈥榞ood news is bad news鈥 mode yet.鈥 With luck, China has absorbed a lesson from the US. Fiscal support was perceived to have been unwound too quickly in the years after the subprime lending collapse, leaving ultra-low interest rates to do the hard work and earning the early 2010s the epithet of a jobless recovery.

Speaking of the monetary arena, Xi did the People鈥檚 Bank of China (PBoC) a favor by paying his first visit to the authority since becoming president. The central bank isn鈥檛 independent like the Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank, so meetings with the head of state aren鈥檛 seen as causes of anxiety. There鈥檚 no fear that the non-existent autonomy will be trampled or that financial technocrats need to be cajoled into toeing the government line. On the contrary, the pop-in may bolster the PBoC by suggesting it has Xi鈥檚 ear and will be elevated in the decision-making hierarchy.

This is a world away from the trepidation in Washington when the Fed chair periodically meets with the president. Is independence about to be compromised? Will the White House encourage or bully, offer succor or hang the Fed chair out to dry? Worse, does the Fed know something bad that we don鈥檛?

Perhaps a better analogy is away from central banking. In 1992, China鈥檚 then-paramount leader, Deng Xiaoping, of Guangdong to laud the special economic zones that housed sprawling factories assembling goods for consumption in the West. Deng emphasized economic reform and his tour was credited with helping re-kindle investment after the Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Xi has blessed the PBoC, and the Communist Party 鈥 finally 鈥 has embraced important fiscal stimulus. This won鈥檛 end the fixation with the annual growth target, but it鈥檚 a nice start. That 5% looks like it鈥檚 in the bag. Mediocrity rarely had it so good.

BLOOMBERG OPINION