At the time of the two sessions, national economic circles and experts and scholars wrote or interviewed by reporters, and positively evaluated China’s outstanding performance of 8.7% growth under the severe impact of the international financial crisis, and believed that the Chinese economy’s first rebound is good for the world. China has made positive contributions to the overall recovery of the world economy.

Ren Bingyi, a member of the Korea Financial Investment Association, told this reporter that China's economic development has made tremendous contributions to the world economy. After the outbreak of the international financial crisis, the economic stimulus measures implemented by the Chinese government were very effective and effective. With the gradual recovery of the world economy, countries are increasingly aware of the importance of the Chinese economy, and China's role is also increasing. He said that the promotion of China's economic development to the Korean economy is unquestionable. Nearly all industries such as shipbuilding, electronics and logistics in Korea have been linked to the Chinese economy. South Korea's stock market was previously highly correlated with the US economy. Korean domestic economic analysts always want to analyze US policy measures and economic trends, but now the Korean stock market is more closely related to the Chinese economy. The Korean economic circles are very concerned about the convening of the two sessions in China and hope to understand China's economic policies through the two sessions.

John S. Roosevelt University professor John Ross wrote to the Financial Times that China’s GDP growth rate in 2009 was the highest among the major economies, reaching 8.7%. The rapid growth of China's domestic demand has replaced the role of external demand in growth, demonstrating China's ability to cope with the external environment. The growth of China's pure imports has played a crucial role in the rapid recovery of Asia from the rest of the world.

Hong Pingfan, director of the World Economic Monitoring Department of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, said in an exclusive interview with this reporter on the 3rd that the Chinese economy’s first rebound is of great significance to the world. The international financial crisis brought serious trauma to the world's real economy in 2009. The world's gross domestic product fell by 2.2% in 2009 compared with the previous year. It was the first global economic recession since the Second World War. China has implemented a plan to expand domestic demand in a timely and decisive manner, and promoted the Chinese economy to gradually accelerate from the previous quarter in 2009, achieving a V-shaped reversal. He believes that since the second quarter of 2009, global industrial output, trade flows and commodity prices have gradually recovered, which is closely related to the Chinese economy going out of the trough, and the recovery of China's economy has also promoted many Asian countries. The second quarter of 2009 began to gradually step out of the recession.

In 2009, China was the second largest importer in the world and a large emerging market in the world. According to data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, the Australian economy in 2009 not only did not fall into recession like the rest of the West, but grew by 2.7%. One of the important reasons is the rapid recovery of China's economy and the strong pull of the Chinese market to Australia. Yan Zehua, executive chairman of the Australian China Organizing Committee, said that Australia-China economic relations are very close.

Harding, director of the Ottawa China Society of Canada, visited China three times in recent years, and was impressed by China's economic development and poverty eradication achievements. He told this reporter that in the past 30 years, China has been one of the countries with faster economic development in the world. In the extremely unfavorable world economic environment last year, the Chinese economy still achieved an 8.7% growth.

"Weir Street Daily" economic news editor David Wessel said that China leads emerging economies to take the lead in the recession and move toward growth. China's policies have been very successful, and other countries and regions have benefited from them. They have increased their exports to China or attracted tourists from China. Those economies closely related to China, such as Malaysia and Singapore, have also become the fastest-recovering economies in Asia. Due to the Chinese factor, the share of consumption in emerging economies in 2009 exceeded the domestic consumption for the first time in the world.