Fueled by strong investment, China's economy soared by a
stunning 10.2 percent in the first quarter of this year, a
government spokesman said in Beijing on Thursday while fanning away
worries that the economy might be overheated.
Gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and
service output, reached 4.33 trillion yuan (about US$540 billion),
spokesman Zheng Jingping for the National Bureau of Statistics
announced at a press conference.
"The growth seems to be on the fast side, but I want to say such
a rate still falls in the range of the potential economic growth.
It remains basically normal, though reaching the upper limit," he
said.
"It should arouse concern, and actually has aroused our
attention," Zheng added.
In an interview with Xinhua, Wang Xiaoguang, a macro-economics
research fellow with the National Development and Reform
Commission, said he believes the economy was largely being driven
by hefty investment.
Investment in roads, factory equipment and other fixed assets
totaled 1.39 trillion yuan, a sharp growth of 27.7 percent, or an
increase of 4.9 percentage points year on year.
Investment in urban areas climbed 29.8 percent to 1.16 trillion
yuan, while that in rural areas reached 230 billion yuan, up 18.1
percent. China is launching a massive "socialist new countryside"
campaign to boost rural development, in a bid to narrow the
widening urban-rural gap.
Wang said local governments arranged too many big projects in
2006, the first year for China's 11th Five-Year Development Guidelines.
He called for intensified government efforts to tighten land
approval and lending. In the first three months, Chinese banks
consumed roughly half of the lending target for the whole year,
adding 1.26 trillion yuan of loans, up 13.98 percent from a year
ago.
The State Council outlined a decision at an executive meeting
chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao last Friday, to move to avert a
possible economic overheating by tightening controls on fixed
assets investment and money supply, but detailed plans have yet to
be hammered out.
Of the first-quarter GDP, the primary industry scored 320
billion yuan in value added, up 4.6 percent; the secondary industry
reaped 2.16 trillion yuan, up 12.5 percent; and the tertiary
industry reported 1.85 trillion yuan, up 8.7 percent.
China's economy has grown at an around 10 percent clip for each
of the past three years.
The State Council and China's central bank are fully aware of
the rapid growth in bank loan during the first quarter, Zheng
said.
Between January and March, Chinese banks have provided 1.26
trillion yuan in bank loans, which is more than half of the
2.5-trillion-yuan annual target, Zheng said.
He said money supply must be in line with economic development.
"A rapid growth in bank loans may give economy a spur in short
term. In the long run however, it may cause inflation and confusion
to a healthy economy," he said.
Although the first quarter has seen a 14.7 percent rise in
aggregated bank loan over the same period of last year, or 1.7
percentage points higher over the 13-percent amplitude for entire
2005, the figure is still lower than the amplitudes of 2003 and
2004, Zheng noted.
(Xinhua News Agency April 20, 2006)