China's policy process is not known for surprises; rather, reflecting the heritage of a command economy and the engineering background of many senior leaders, the Chinese policy establishment prefers a predictable and steady regulatory environment conducive to meeting its long-term development goals. China's Five-Year Plan for National Economic and Social Development is a critically important tool used by the government to achieve its development objectives by mapping out in five-year cycles the country's future progress via guidelines, policy frameworks, and targets for policy-makers at all levels of government. China's FYPs are blueprints: they provide overall objectives and goals related to social and economic growth and industrial planning in key sectors and regions. Although most consider the FYP to be a single document, the FYP represents a complex web of Chinese policy-making, containing previously-implemented regional and long-term development plans and hundreds of targeted policy initiatives, all of which undergo constant review and revision over the course of the five-year cycle. The development of the 12th FYP, however, is taking place in a markedly different internal and external environment: the global financial crisis, rising property prices and increased risk of social instability are all salient issues in China that will be prominently addressed by this plan. This study is mainly focused on the cross-strait economic and trade development situation from China twelve five-year plan and ECFA signed, simultaneously, we try to analyze to explore the possible developmental trend in economics and trade.