China’s ruling Communist Party has scheduled a key annual conclave for October, with a main focus on deliberating the next five-year plan for the country’s economic, political and social goals amid continued tension with the United States.
The announcement came after a meeting of the Politburo on Wednesday that set the tone for the coming fourth plenary session to be attended by more than 370 Central Committee members of the party elite.
The much-anticipated plenum will be held in Beijing, according to state news agency Xinhua.
The exact dates of the event have not been made public, but practice over the past decade suggests the event is likely to land in the second half of October and last four days.
That means the plenum will be held before the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit in Seoul, which will begin on October 31. The summit is seen as a possible window for a meeting between President Xi Jinping and his US counterpart Donald Trump to iron out a long list of differences in US-China relations.
The plenum will also be held more than a month after China stages a parade to commemorate the end of World War II. Xi and Russian President Vladimir Putin will be among the world leaders to attend the event, to be held in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square on September 3.
In instructions on the new blueprint’s formulation, Xi said in May that the party’s central leadership was “organising the drafting of a proposal for the 15th five-year plan”. A one-month online public consultation on the formulation of the plan was also launched in May.