The Chinese economy is not doing very well, if the growth rate is considered.
Christopher Lu, chief partner of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, said Li confidently shared his view on China's future development and reform in his speech during the opening ceremony of 2014 Boao Forum for Asia.
David Olsson said, "What Li Keqiang said this morning was very positive."
David Gazard, director of ECG Financial based in Melbourne, was impressed by Li's speech.
Carlos Gutierrez, chairman of Albright Stonebridge Group in Washington, said Premier Li's speech gave "a very clear vision of where he wants China to go".
I and other business people from around the world who have interest in China's success believe that the reform is the right strategy for China as we look to the future on many levels.
The success of online wealth management products such as Yu'ebao has pushed Internet financing into the spotlight and it even appeared in the government work report in March this year.
Micro and small enterprises are still facing financing difficulties despite the government's efforts to support the development of MSEs since 2008.
Premier Li Keqiang ruled out the possibility of any strong stimulus measures to raise China's GDP growth on Thursday at the Boao Forum.
China's currency yuan is expected to become one of three global reserve currencies by 2030 on a par with the US dollar and euro.
In a society ruled by law, any policy that is going to affect the public must be carried out according to the law and based on fair procedures.
Private consumption of luxury items is often a far more rational, planned and, therefore, deliberate process.
In his first work report to the National People's Congress, Premier Li Keqiang set China's GDP growth target at about 7.5 percent for the third straight year in 2014 and pledged to continue economic reforms.
Three decades of high economic growth in China have served to lift millions of people out of poverty. But, at the same time, the gap between the rich and the poor has widened sharply, threatening welfare, social stability, and growth itself.
While China may still be some distance from a housing market collapse, over-supply will cripple the economies of second-, third- and fourth-tier cities.
China is opting for a thorough cure for its problems - meaning it will struggle through a long incremental process of reform without entirely sacrificing growth.
Even if we could bounce back from a crash, the cost would be high. Boom-and-bust destroys well-being, which is diminished far more by a fall in GDP than it is enhanced by an equal and opposite GDP increase.
The further opening-up of the Chinese economy will bring more opportunities and potential for growth to Europe, according to Hubert Lienhard, chairman of the Asia-Pacific Committee of German Business.
Sesame Street's Kermit the Frog once lamented that "it's not easy bein' green." Today, this sentiment is surprisingly relevant to the global economy - only it is becoming green that is the problem.
Two defining features of today's new global economy are the rise of Asia and the power of interconnections.