Top Biz News

'Economy has embarked onto the track of steady recovery'

(China Daily/Xinhua)
Updated: 2010-01-27 07:56
Large Medium Small

Shanghai has lowered its annual growth target for GDP from 9 percent last year to 8 percent as the city hopes to improve the quality of local economy and secure a steady recovery.

The proposal was made by mayor Han Zheng at the Shanghai Municipal People's Congress, which opened yesterday, and is to be reviewed by local legislators.

Han said the city's GDP fell short of the 9 percent projection and grew 8.2 percent last year.

"Shanghai's economy has embarked onto the track of steady recovery," he assured the legislature. "We are at a crucial period when industrial upgrading and economic rebalancing should be further enhanced."

Among other projections proposed by the city government for this year are an 8 percent rise in local fiscal revenue, a registered unemployment rate of around 4.5 percent, environmental-protecting investment equivalent to 3 percent of the city's total GDP, and research and development expenses from local finance up to 2.8 percent of its GDP.

The city government also vowed to cut its energy consumption per GDP unit by 20 percent during the 11th Five Year Plan period ending this year.

Han did not specify the target for the year's consumer price index, a benchmark for retail inflation, saying that the figure would be linked to the price control target of the central government.

Related readings:
'Economy has embarked onto the track of steady recovery' China's economy hits annual target, but concerns linger
'Economy has embarked onto the track of steady recovery' Growth data fuels talk of 2nd biggest economy
'Economy has embarked onto the track of steady recovery' Economy in fast lane amid challenges

'Economy has embarked onto the track of steady recovery' Shanghai aims lower GDP growth but better quality
'Economy has embarked onto the track of steady recovery' Shanghai in final sprint for World Expo

Han said that the Shanghai World Expo, which opens May 1, would bring the city both opportunities and challenges in economic development. "We will take a package of policies to make sure the local economy gradually recovers quarter by quarter," he said.

In 2009, Shanghai raked in 254 billion yuan ($37.2 billion) in local revenue, up 7.7 percent from a year ago while the city's fixed investment rose by 9.2 percent to 527.33 billion yuan.

Last year, Shanghai's consumer price index lowered by 0.4 percent from that of 2008 while retail sales of consumer products rose by 14 percent, he said.

On employment, Han said Shanghai had 596,000 new job opportunities in 2009 and would have 500,000 more in 2010.

The city will adopt a more active employment policy this year and continue to stabilize employment, improve professional training and employment assistance, he said.