China’s economic growth probably to slow down

“According to our initial judgment, 2007 was probably the peak point of the current Chinese economic growth curve. The growth rate from this year on will slow down gradually,” Xu told China Economic Weekly, a magazine run by the country’s mass-selling newspaper The People’s Daily.

According to Xu, the Chinese economy had registered a double-digit growth rate in the past five consecutive years since 2003. The growth rate was an average of 12.8 percent annually.

It was the second time since 1990 that the world’s fourth largest economy witnessed such robust growth. Between 1992 and 1996, the Chinese economy soared annually by 12.4 percent on average.

Such growth, however, would not last given the law of economic cycles, Xu said, adding a slowdown was certainly to take place after a peak point on the growth curve.

“Globally, it is rare for the economies to sustain a double-digit growth rate for five years in a row. So far, only Japan, Singapore and Hong Kong have scored such performance.”

He added another sign of a slowdown in the economy existed in the fact that China’s growth rates for 2008 forecast by international financial institutions were all lower than 11.9 percent, the 2007 growth rate for the country.

He said the cyclical fluctuation, this time, was expected to be much milder than that in the 1990-1999 cycle and the Chinese economy looked to make a successful soft-landing in the coming years.

According to Xu, in 1999, China reported an annual growth rate of 7.9 percent, which he said was the trough of the 1990-1999 cycle.

“The current cycle has not ended yet. We are forecasting a new trough, which we think won’t be too low.”

Over the mounting inflationary pressure, Xu told the weekly the inflationary peak point of the current economic cycle was expected to show up in 2009, two years after the appearance of the growth peak.

“This year, we are facing a very severe situation in terms of inflation. In fact, we expected the inflation rate to drop in the second quarter but it didn’t happen.”

According to Xu, it was probable that the drop of the inflation rate would be further delayed in the wake of the May 12 8.0-magnitude earthquake that rocked the southwestern Sichuan Province and had killed 69,142 people as of Monday noon.

“We should pay the utmost attention to inflation. If the inflation rate reaches the peak one or two years later from now, the Chinese economy would be under huge pressure.”

Last week, the Institute of Finance Research under the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) said in a report that the Chinese economy had slowed because of the U.S. credit crunch, a spate of tightening measures and natural disasters.

Consumer prices were high, making the fight against inflation arduous, the report said. “The pressures for broad-based price rises are still the biggest risk for the macro-economy.”

The consumer price index (CPI) rose 8.2 percent in the first four months from a year earlier, the highest in 12 years and above the government target of 4.8 percent for 2008.

The high inflation came amid high commodities prices, normal rises of China’s once-low resources and labor costs and economic structural imbalances.

Inflationary pressure would be heavy for the whole year as prices of commodities and food had further room to rise. There would be increasing demand for credit in the post-quake period, the report noted.

“The government should stick to tightening policies to prevent excessive credit growth and thus provide a relatively tight environment to constrain total demand and stabilize prices,” it said.

It also suggested the authorities pursue pricing reforms for resources in the medium and long term to ease price pressures caused by the extensive growth mode and excessive consumption of resources.

Posted under China Current Events

This post was written by admin on June 11, 2008

China dropped two places to 17th in the latest World Competitiveness

China dropped two places to 17th in the latest World Competitiveness Yearbook compiled by Swiss business school IMD, but its position has generally continued rising in recent years, the compilers said on May 21, 2008.

This year’s drop isn’t statistically significant, and “China has been on the upward path” in recent years, IMD World Competitiveness Center research fellow Suzanne Rosselet said. In 1995, China ranked 34th.

Rosselet said many factors have contributed to the drop, such as domestic price hikes and the environmental costs of development.

The U.S. continued to top the competitiveness rankings for the 15th consecutive year despite signs its economy is declining.

The IMD economists said the report was based on 2007 data that don’t reflect the U.S.’ current economic woes. “The big question is whether the United States will be No 1 after this year,” project director Stephane Garelli said.

Singapore and China’s Hong Kong kept their respective second- and third-place rankings, and the gap is narrowing between these two economies and the U.S.’, the IMD study said.

Switzerland climbed two places to fourth.

Among the so-called “golden BRIC” countries, Brazil jumped six places to 43rd; Russia dropped by four to 47th; and India dropped two places to 29th.

The study evaluated 55 economies using 331 criteria to measure how those nations create and maintain favorable business conditions. Such factors as economic performance, government efficiency, business efficiency and infrastructure are major criteria for the measurement. In economic performance, China ranked No 2, and it ranked 12th in government efficiency.

“China is an economic miracle by any standard,” John Wells, who became head of IMD in April, said on May 21 in Beijing.

But Rosselet said China’s rapid economic growth has come at a cost.

Its exports, for example, have provided inexpensive products for Western countries, but also consumed a lot of resources and produced a lot of pollution in the country, analysts said.

Rosselet also said the Sichuan earthquake, which devastated the province last Monday, would have a marginal impact on the “resilient” Chinese economy. In addition, the government’s transparency and openness in dealing with the disaster would boost its international image, she added.

Posted under Company Directory, Trade News

This post was written by admin on June 1, 2008