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The World
Bank said Tuesday£šAug 15,2006£©China's economy
is expected to grow 10.4 percent this year and
9.3 percent in 2007.
Although China's gross domestic product expanded
by 10.9 percent in the first half of the year,
implying second quarter growth of 11.3 percent,
a pace not seen since 1996, the outlook for the
country's economy remains "favorable",
prompting no need for overheating worries, the
bank said in a quarterly report released in Beijing.
With production capacity continuing to expand
in line with demand, inflation low and the current
account in surplus, the main policy concern is
not general overheating for now. In the long term,
however, the continued investment boom warrants
concerns about efficiency and makes more moderate
growth desirable, explained the report.
The Bank has projected a mild slowdown in exports
and fixed assets investment for the second half,
which would imply a slight fall in GDP growth
to under 10 percent at the end of the year, resulting
in growth of 10.4 percent for the year as a whole.
Bert Hofman, the bank's Lead Economist for China,
stressed that the country's investment has been
increasingly driven by firm's profits and profitability
rather than administrative agendas.
For instance, sectors like transport equipment,
ordinary machinery, and the textile industry which
were identified by China's National Development
and Reform Commission as having seen particularly
rapid fixed assets investment growth, saw particularly
high profit growth.
The only exceptions, he said, were large sectors
outside of core manufacturing where government
policies including on pricing have a large influence.
Another noticeable point is that investment growth
tended to be higher in sectors dominated by the
private sector, said the report.
Source£ºChina Daily
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