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BIZCHINA / Macro Economy
GDP grows 11.1% in first quarter
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-04-19 15:15
Li Xiaochao, spokesman of the National Bureau of Statistics, speaks at a
press conference on China's economy in Beijing, April 19, 2007. [ciic]
China's gross domestic product, or GDP, totaled 5.03 trillion yuan
(US$653 billion) in the first quarter of this year, according to latest
figures provided by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) Thursday.
The growth was 0.7 percentage points higher than the year-earlier level,
or 0.4 percentage points higher than the level for whole of last year.
China's primary, secondary and tertiary sectors reported a respective
363.1 billion, 2.56 trillion and 2.11 trillion yuan in added value, with
the secondary sector, including manufacturing, mining and construction,
growing at the fastest year-on-year rate -- 13.2 percent -- in the
January-March period, the statistical bureau said.
The primary sector posted a growth rate of 4.4 percent and the tertiary
sector, including transport, posts and telecommunications, catering,
tourism, banking and insurance, recorded an increase of 9.9 percent, the
bureau added.
The rapid economic growth was driven by investment, consumption and
import and export, said Li Xiaochao, spokesman with the statistical
bureau, citing consumption in particular, which grew in an impressive way
in the first quarter.
As for the question about whether the Chinese economy is overheated, Li
said it was a comprehensive problem, and to judge whether it is
overheated, the GDP-growth indicator alone was not enough.
But Li warned that now there existed a risk for the economy to evolve
from fast growth to overheating.
According to the bureau, China's consumer price index, or CPI, a major
inflation index, grew by 2.7 percent in the first quarter, 1.5 percentage
points higher than the same period of last year.
The three-month period saw a quicker growth in retail sales together with
a slower growth in investment, which was seen as a healthier development
for the fast-growing national economy, according to Li Xiaochao.
The nation's retail sales was up 14.9 percent year-on-year to 2.12
trillion yuan (US$275.2 billion), with the increment 2.1 percentage
points higher than a year earlier.
Fixed-assets investment amounted to 1.75 trillion yuan (US$227.6
billion), up 23.7 percent. The growth was four percentage points slower
than the same period of last year.
Of the total, however, the real estate sector used 254.4 billion yuan
(US$46 billion), up 26.9 percent. The growth rate was 6.7 percentage
points higher than the year-earlier level and 1.6 percentage points than
the growth rate for fixed assets investment in urban areas.
Input in residential housing projects stood at 246.2 billion yuan, up
30.4 percent, 7.3 percentage points quicker than the year-earlier level.
Between January and March, China realized US$457.7 billion in foreign
trade, up 23.3 percent. The total included US$252.1 billion in export
value, up 27.8 percent, and US$205.7 billion in import value, up 18.2
percent. The trade surplus reached US$46.4 billion, US$23.1 billion more
than the year-earlier level.
China actually used 15.9 billion U.S. dollars in foreign direct
investment in the three months, up 11.6 percent. By the end of March, the
country's foreign exchange reserves stood at US$1.2 trillion, an
increment of US$135.7 billion from the end of 2006.
In the first quarter, urban residents had their per-capita disposable
income rise 19.5 percent, or 16.6 percent in real term, to 3,935 yuan,
and the cash income of rural dwellers up 15.2 percent, or 12.1 percent in
real term, to 1,260 yuan.
The real-term growth in urbanites' income was 5.8 percentage points
higher year-on-year, while farmers' income grew 0.6 percentage points
quicker.
At the end of March, the outstanding amount of narrow money, or M1 (cash
plus corporate current deposits), stood at 12.8 trillion yuan, a growth
of 19.8 percent year-on-year, 7.1 percentage points quicker.
The outstanding amount of broad money, or M2 (M1 plus residential savings
deposits), stood at 36.4 trillion yuan, a growth of 17.3 percent
year-on-year, 1.5 percentage points slower.
Cash in circulation (M0) amounted to 2.7 trillion yuan, a growth of 16.7
percent, 6.2 percentage points faster.
(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
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