China's government procurement in 2005 rise 37 pct (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-08-10 22:19
BEIJING -- China's governments at all levels spent 292.76 billion yuan
(US$36.6 billion) on procurement in 2005, an increase of 37.1 percent year on
year, according to figures released Wednesday by the Ministry of Finance.
The ministry said the value of the country's government procurement in 2005
accounted for 1.6 percent of the gross domestic product(GDP), almost the same as
in 2004.
The proportion of government procurement to GDP in developed countries
averages 10 to 15 percent.
The value of government procurement has been growing at an annual average
rate of 77.9 percent since 1999, the year the Government Procurement Law came
into effect.
Government spending on engineering projects and service industries increased
to 132 billion yuan (US$16.5 billion) and 19 billion yuan (US$2.4 billion)
respectively, with the former making up 45.2 percent and the later 6.7 percent
of the total volume.
China aims to use government procurement to spur economic growth in less
developed areas and small and medium-size enterprises. It also plans to spend
more on procuring environmental protection.
The ministry said China's governments are likely to spend up to 300 billion
yuan (US$37.5 billion) on government procurement in 2006, up 5 billion yuan
(US$621 million) from last year.
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