InChina's gross domestic product (GDP) reached
7.1682 trillion yuan (US$866 billion) in the first nine
months of this year, up 7.9 percent year-on-year, the
National Bureau of Statistics said Wednesday.
NBS Deputy Director Qiu Xiaohua told a press
conference Wednesday morning that this growth rate was 0.3
percentage points higher than that a year earlier.
Growth rose to 8.1 percent year-on-year for
the third quarter alone, all-but guaranteeing Asia's
second-largest economy will easily exceed its stated 7.0
percent growth figure for the year as a whole.
Despite a tricky global economic situation,
China's already swift economic growth has accelerated
throughout the year, from 7.6 percent and 8.0 in the first
and second quarters respectively.
He said that
the added value of the primary industry was 895.9 billion
yuan, up three percent; that of the secondary industry
was3.8168 trillion yuan, up 10 percent; and that of the
tertiary industry was 2.4555 trillion yuan, up 6.6 percent.
However the statistics revealed that already
vast government spending to stoke economic demand most
likely increased still further in the third quarter.
The official said that foreign direct
investment to China this year is expected to exceed 50
billion US dollars, "or possibly to reach 55 billion
dollars this if everything goes smoothly."
Qiu added that in the first nine months, the
growth of foreign investment was evident, with a contracted
FDI of 68.4 billion dollars, up 38.4 percent year-on-year.
The actually used FDI jumped 22.6 percent to 39.6 billion
dollars.
Meanwhile, the total import and
export grew 18.3 percent to 445.1 billion dollars in the
three quarters, with export up 19.4 percent to 232.6 billion
dollars and import up 17.2 percent to 212.6 billion dollars.
A trade surplus of 20 billion dollars was realized, 6.6
billion dollars more than a year earlier.
China's export to the United States grew by
24.5 percent; to the EU, up 13.8 percent; to the ASEAN, up
27.4 percent; to Hong Kong, up 25.2 percent, to the Republic
of Korea, up 19.9 percent; and to Japan, up 4.9 percent, he
said.
A total of 2.5838 trillion yuan (US$312
billion) in fix assets investment was materialized in China
in the first three quarters of this year, up 21.8 percent
year-on-year.
The deputy Director said that
investment in capital construction rose 24.6 percent, that
in technological renovation and upgrading grew 16.3 percent,
and that in real estate development jumped 29.4 percent.
Investment in agricultural and water
conservancy sectors, infrastructure facilities, industries
and various modern services all maintained steady growth;
while that in eastern, central and western regions grew side
by side, Qiu said.
China's domestic market
continued to operate in a stable manner during the first
three quarters of 2002, with total retail sales of consumer
goods rising 8.7 percent year-on-year to more than 2.9111
trillion yuan (US$351.7 billion).
China has
witnessed significant increases in the sales of automobiles,
housing and telecommunications equipment, indicating the
emergence of a new consumer pattern.
In the
January-September period, the sales of telecommunications
equipment and automobiles increased 62.4 percent and 58
percent, respectively. Housing sales jumped 31.9 percent,
and individual buyers contributed 91 percent of the total
housing sales.
In contrast with the strong
consumer sales, Qiu said, consumer prices remained
relatively low. Consumer prices dropped 0.8 percentage
points in the last three quarters from a year earlier.
NBS Chief Economist Yao Jingyuan said the
concurrence of the fast-growing national economy and the
relatively low consumer prices is expected to continue for
the foreseeable future. However, this phenomenon is common
and should not be interpreted as a sign of deflation.
In the nine months, consumer goods sales
increased 9.8 percent to 1.85 trillion yuan in urban areas,
and rose 6.8 percent to 1.06trillion yuan while sales in
rural areas.
Qiu said that, in view of the
slower growth of rural retail sales, the Chinese government
is preparing to take steps to stimulate demand in those
areas.
However China's economy faces continued
deflationary pressure, with consumer prices falling 0.8
percent nationwide over the first nine months of the year
compared to the same period of 2001.
Qiu
acknowledged the role played by these expansionary measures.
"The state policies of expanding domestic demand and
market demand have become the two major driving forces of
economic development," he told reporters.
the last five years since the conclusion of
the 15th National Congress of the Communist Party of China
(CPC), major objectives set by the congress have been
achieved.
"By 2000, the per capita gross
domestic product (GDP) in China had exceeded 800 US dollars
and ordinary people were leading a generally comfortable
life. By 2001, per capita GDP had exceeded 900 US
dollars," says Qiu Xiaohua, deputy director of the
National Statistics Bureau (NSB).
Bai Hejin
from the Macro Economy Research Institute under the State
Development Planning Commission says, "Establishment
and improvement of a socialist market economic system is a
major breakthrough in China's economic reform since the 15th
CPC National Congress."
In the last five
years, Bai says, the non-pubic economic sector has become an
important force in the national economy, whereas the market
has been playing an unprecedented regulatory role. By the
end of last year, the market had decided prices for 90
percent of all merchandises and services.
Over
the last five years, efforts on poverty elimination have
also proved effective. By 2000, the poverty rate in rural
China had been brought down to around three percent.
Returning state-owned enterprises running in
the red to profitability is a major objective set by the
15th CPC National Congress. This object had been achieved by
the end of 2000, according to the State Economic and Trade
Commission. In 2000, profits from state-owned enterprises
and enterprises in which the state has a controlling stake
reached 239.2 billion yuan (US$28 billion), 1.97 times over
the 1997 figure. In addition, a modern corporate system had
been established in 84 percent of state-owned companies and
companies where the state has a majority stake.
A stable, fast-developing China has won
international acclaim. In the year 2001, Beijing won the
right to hold the Olympics in 2008. In the same year, China
joined the World Trade Organization.
"All these have had a significant and
far-reaching impact on the country's development as well as
the prestige of the Party," says Li Shousheng, a senior
official with the State Economic and Trade Commission."
They have not only inspired the Chinese people with a
patriotic sentiment and national pride but also let the rest
of the world see a growing China full of hope."
Chinese communists regard the reunification of
their motherland as their sacred mission. In the last five
years, great progress has been made in this regard. Hong
Kong has remained stable and prosperous after its return,
and Macao has come back to the embrace of the motherland.
Increasing economic exchanges and other interactions across
the Taiwan Strait show that the policy of "peaceful
reunification and one country, two systems" is gaining
acceptance by increasing numbers of Taiwan people and that
reunification of the motherland is an unstoppable trend and
a common aspiration of the Chinese people.