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China targets early recovery with stimulus, consumer spending
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-02-03 17:15

China targets early recovery with stimulus, consumer spending
Migrant workers arrive at the Guangzhou Railway Station in Guangdong province, January 7, 2009. [China Daily] 

Since Guangdong's exports accounted for more than one fourth of the country's total of $1.43 trillion last year, the provincial decline had a significant impact on national figures.

In November, China's exports fell 2.4 percent year-on-year, the first monthly decline since June 2001. In December, the decline was 2.8 percent.

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The declines took some of the sizzle out of economic growth since exports, along with investment and consumption, was one of the three major factors driving the economy.

China doesn't provide an exact breakdown of those three components of gross domestic product (GDP), but domestic and foreign economists have estimated that foreign trade normally accounts for about 40 percent and investment for about 35 percent.

Figures get ugly

In the fourth quarter of 2008, economic growth slid to 6.8 percent year-on-year, sharply down from 9 percent in the previous quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has reported.

That was the slowest pace since the fourth quarter of 1999, when the economy grew only 6.1 percent as a result of the Asian financial crisis.

On a full-year basis, GDP grew 9 percent year-on-year, the lowest since 2001, when an annual rate of 8.3 percent was recorded.

Breaking down growth by activity, Ma said, the 9 percent included 4.2 percentage points from investment, 4 points from consumption and 0.8 points from exports. In 2007, exports contributed more than 3 percentage points of the annual 13 percent GDP growth.

Tang Min, deputy secretary of the China Development Research Foundation, a think tank linked to the State Council, said the financial crisis had struck hard at exports and export-related industries, which led to some ugly figures.

"As a major economy, China relies too much on exports, which entails big risks," said Tang.

Ding Yuanzhu, a Beijing-based economic scholar with the National School of Administration, a training facility for civil servants, echoed Tang's assessment. Even though China has become the world's third-largest economy, it has weaknesses, such as a heavy reliance on trade and weak domestic demand. The global economic crisis underscored those weaknesses, he said.

In mid-January, the NBS revised China's 2007 GDP to 25.73 trillion yuan ($3.76 trillion), which enabled China to overtake Germany as the world's third-largest economy, after the United States and Japan.


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