When China, the world's manufacturing powerhouse, unveils its industrial blueprint for the next five years, people are eager to learn what effects this will have on the world.
China's ruling party has approved recommendations for the country's 15th Five-Year Plan, a roadmap that will steer national development through 2030. The document outlines China's development plan for the 2026-2030 period, noting that building "a modernized industrial system" with "advanced manufacturing as the backbone" will be a top priority.
Released on Tuesday, the document also emphasizes achieving greater self-reliance and strength in science and technology, and fostering new quality productive forces.
The accelerated push toward high-quality development is drawing close attention from global observers and business executives, who see vast new potential for international cooperation and shared technological progress. Many are already recalibrating strategies to align with the opportunities presented by China's evolving industrial landscape.
NEW QUALITY PRODUCTIVE FORCES
China, which has topped global manufacturing output for 15 years, is moving from its focus on scale-driven growth to innovation and quality-oriented development. This pivot is aimed at enhancing competitiveness and driving the country up the global value chain.
"After more than 40 years of rapid growth, China is evolving from the 'world's factory' to that of a global innovation engine, or in other words, a global center of intelligent manufacturing," said Zhang Monan, deputy director of the Institute of American and European Studies at the China Center for International Economic Exchanges, a government think tank.
The country is spearheading the transformation fueled by the cultivation of "new quality productive forces," at the core of which lies a commitment to translating cutting-edge technologies into burgeoning new industries.
As outlined in the document, China plans to turn next-generation industries, including quantum technology, bio-manufacturing, hydrogen and nuclear fusion power, brain-computer interfaces, embodied artificial intelligence and 6G mobile communications, into new drivers of economic growth.
These industries are poised for significant growth, with the scale set to be added over the next decade being equivalent to creating a whole new high-tech sector in China, thus injecting continuous momentum into the high-quality development of the country's economy, Zheng Shanjie, head of the National Development and Reform Commission, told a press conference last week.
Besides scaling up emerging sectors and actively cultivating future industries, China is also making its traditional industries smarter and more efficient.
The efforts are already yielding tangible results. At an ANTA smart factory in Xiamen, east China's Fujian Province, garments with digital IDs move seamlessly along automated overhead rails through cutting, sewing and quality check processes, while robotic vehicles transport materials across the sprawling factory floor. The factory's use of digital systems, robotics and real-time data helps cut production time and improve quality, exemplifying the broader transformation underway in China's industrial landscape.
Analysts have highlighted the broader implications of the push. China's drive to build a modernized industrial system is not only pivotal for its domestic high-quality development but also set to deliver positive spillover effects worldwide, said Kuang Xianming, vice president of the China Institute for Reform and Development.
Amid rising global uncertainties and protectionism, China's push for a new round of industrial upgrading is set to further expand its market scale, unlocking immense opportunities for development and cooperation, particularly in sectors such as green development, digital economy, bio-medicine, high-end medical and health care and modern services, Kuang added.
Evidence of this appeal is already apparent. Foreign direct investment into China's e-commerce service sector as well as the manufacturing of aerospace equipment and medical equipment surged by 155.2 percent, 38.7 percent and 17 percent, respectively, during the first nine months of 2025, according to official data, bucking a global investment lethargy.
The industrial upgrading is also driving demand for advanced machinery such as robotics. China has maintained its position as the world's largest industrial robot market for 12 years in a row.
The positive impact extends beyond borders, as the advancement of new quality productive forces translates directly into tangible global benefits, particularly in tackling some shared challenges.
The Chinese-made new energy vehicles in markets like Thailand are lending crucial support to green development goals. China's solar boom, lately described by Columbia University professor Adam Tooze as "world-changing industrial policy," has dramatically driven down the cost of renewable energy, making clean power accessible and affordable for low-income and developing countries.
NURTURING GROUND FOR INNOVATION
With its industrial upgrading gathering pace, China is evolving into an efficient platform for global collaborative innovation, a shift exemplified by deepening partnerships between international corporations and Chinese tech leaders.
At the 2025 World New Energy Vehicle Congress last month, Sean Green, president and CEO of BMW Group Region China, highlighted joint projects with China's domestic leaders across key areas, including a co-design effort with battery giant CATL for large cylindrical cells, a partnership with self-driving startup Momenta on driver-assist software, and a collaboration to integrate Alibaba's AI foundation model and Huawei's intelligent-vehicle stack into BMW cars.
"This goes beyond conventional partnerships," and it forms "a symbiotic ecosystem that benefits both sides," said Green. "Technology openness is the valuable experience we took from China's success," he added.
In China, BMW has its largest production base and R&D team outside Germany, with over 3,000 engineers across R&D centers in Beijing, Shanghai, Shenyang and Nanjing, as well as three dedicated software development companies.
"China is highly competitive," said Oliver Zipse, chairman of the board of management of BMW AG, in an earlier interview with Xinhua. Yet "the biggest innovations we see come out of China," and "combining our strengths allows us to develop products that set new standards globally."
Zhang described such partnerships as combining strengths. She said China's strong manufacturing base and complete industrial chains help foreign technologies thrive, which in turn spurs innovation of overseas companies.
"Many innovative companies and international tech giants are willing to place their R&D and innovation centers in China because the closer you are to the demand, the more impactful and effective your innovation becomes," Zhang said. This proximity enables rapid adjustments to meet market needs.
The speed of innovation and industrialization in China is often faster than in other regions, making China a "nurturing ground" for global technological innovation, she said.
This trend is underpinned by China's super-sized domestic market, complete industrial system and infrastructure, as well as the country's sustained support for innovation, including consistently rising research and development expenditure, improving intellectual property protection, the fostering of talent and enhancing institutional collaboration to shorten the path from lab to market, according to analysts.
This year, China broke into the top 10 on the Global Innovation Index, making it one of the world's fastest-rising innovators over the past decade.
China's industrial upgrading is presenting substantial opportunities for international cooperation, and with the country's high-standard opening up continuing apace, more sectors are expected to embrace technology sharing and collaborative innovation models, Kuang said.

