Public spending to be trimmed
8/11/2004 11:58
China will trim spending next year, boosting state efforts to slow economic
growth to a more sustainable pace, Vice Finance Minister Lou Jiwei said. In
the first eight months of the year, the central government's investment in
roads, bridges and other fixed assets rose 4.3 percent to 501 billion yuan
(US$61 billion), according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Including
spending by local governments and state-controlled companies, investment jumped
26 percent to 1.86 trillion yuan during the time. "We will reduce the size of
the budget deficit and cut public investment," Lou said at a Beijing conference
attended by senior government officials. "The success we have achieved in
adjusting economic growth is still preliminary and incremental." Expansion in
the world's seventh-largest economy eased to 9.1 percent in the third quarter
from 9.6 percent in the previous three months as the government restricted
lending and investment. The central bank on October 28 raised its benchmark
interest rate for the first time in nine years and the State Information Center
forecast growth will ease to 8.7 percent this quarter. The government is
trying to cool expansion in industries including autos, steel and cement it says
are expanding too rapidly, clogging transport links and straining supplies of
electricity and raw materials. Central bank Deputy Governor Li Ruogu said growth
of 7 percent to 8 percent would allow for a healthy economy for the next two
decades. Growth is expected to slow to 8.5 percent next year from an
estimated 9.3 percent in 2004, the State Information Center said in its 2005
China Industry Development Report, which was released at the conference. The
center is a research unit of the State Development and Reform Commission,
China's top planning body. The median forecast of eight economists in a
Bloomberg News survey this month was for growth to slow to 8.4 percent in 2005
from an estimated 9.2 percent this year. The economy grew a revised 9.3 percent
last year, the fastest pace since 1996, as investment in factories, offices and
other fixed assets surged 28 percent. Investment rose 28 percent in the first
nine months after jumping 53 percent from a year earlier in January and
February. Growth may pick up again as government restrictions are having little
impact, according to Wang Yu, deputy director of the monetary policy department
at the People's Bank of China. "Of 17.3 trillion yuan of projects that have
been examined by the State Development and Reform Commission, only 1 percent
have been canceled," he said at the conference. "Inflationary pressures still
exist." Fixed-asset investment will probably rise 21 percent this quarter and
inflation is expected to average 3.8 percent, the information center said in its
report.
Bloomberg News
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