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Premier vows a balance in new reforms

By Zhao Yinan in Beijing and Chen Weihua in Washington | China Daily USA | Updated: 2013-11-08 12:58

Amid high expectations for economic reform policies to be rolled out at next week's third plenum of the 18th Communist Party of China Central Committee, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang pledged to keep economic growth within a reasonable range and push forward with economic restructuring.

Noting that the economy has shown signs of stabilization and strength, Li said more concerted efforts should be made to accomplish this year's major tasks and create favorable conditions for the coming year.

The premier made the remarks at a meeting in northeast China's Heilongjiang province, attended by leaders from Heilongjiang, Jilin, Fujian and Henan provinces and the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

The government set its annual economic growth target at 7.5 percent at the beginning of the year. That goal is widely expected to be reached, with growth for the first three quarters hitting 7.7 percent.

Li emphasized that China's development must be scientific and feature quality and efficiency. It must also create more job opportunities and improve people's well-being.

He called for greater efforts to enhance livelihoods and to bring benefits of reform to the people.

The premier attributed China's economic recovery against the backdrop of a gloomy global economy to a correct macroeconomic policy that can "stabilize the current situation" while benefiting the economy in the long run.

The cancellation of administration approval procedures and the delegation of some government powers to lower levels, for example, have better served private investors.

In an Oct 31 meeting, Li also stressed that China will strike a balance between growth and reform.

The top leadership's repeated remarks on avoiding blind pursuit of GDP growth ahead of a major Party congress indicates that the leadership has reached a consensus that tolerates modest growth in the next three to five years, analysts said.

Reforms to be unveiled after the plenum have also attracted much attention, as the world is concerned about whether China will continue to make a sustainable contribution to global development, said Zhuang Jian, an economist at the Asian Development Bank. "The health of the future Chinese economy will lay the groundwork for those contributions," he said.

International Monetary Fund data show China contributed 29.8 percent of the world's net economic growth between 2008 and 2012. China's GDP growth of 7.8 percent last year was the slowest since 1999.

Zhuang said the next round of reforms should try to eradicate factors that hold the country back from sustainable growth. He cited problems including an over-reliance on investment and exports and unwise use of resources.

Zhang Liqun, an analyst with the Development Research Center of the State Council, said the reforms will take China's growth to a higher-level, lower-cost and more sustainable pattern.

The country's global contribution can be expected to grow in quality and efficiency, he said.

Zhao Yumin, an analyst at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and Economic Cooperation, said the past three decades of reform and opening up have taught China that it should actively integrate into the world economy.

The newly established Shanghai Free Trade Zone is a key market-oriented reform, with a series of policy experiments in trade, investment, governance and the financial and service sectors, Zhao said.

Yukon Huang, a senior associate in the Asia program of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, pointed out that the problem in China is not consumption, as many have suggested, but rather inefficient investment.

He believes that it is efficient investment and not consumption that will drive China's growth.

"I don't think there is a concept of consumption-driven growth," Huang said on Wednesday in a seminar on China's economic transition.

Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, pointed out that factor prices distortions have been the major source of China's economic imbalance, citing an undervalued exchange rate, a real deposit that has stayed negative for too long and a low return on energy sector assets.

Xinhua contributed to the story.

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