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China’s industrial output up 15.4% in Jan-Feb 2008

* China Industrial output in last 10 years​

BEIJING: China’s industrial production cooled down in early 2008 on weakening exports and the worst winter weather in half a century, official data showed Thursday.

Industrial output, a measure of factory production in the world’s fourth-largest economy, expanded by 15.4 percent in January and February from the same period a year ago, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

That compares with a growth rate of 18.5 percent in the first two months of 2007. Industrial output also grew by 18.5 percent for all of last year.

“It has slowed down since the second half of last year,” said Song Guoqing, a Beijing-based economist with the China Centre for Economic Research, a think tank. “(It shows) economic growth is slowing down.”

The apparent weakening in industrial production could reflect a slightly worse outlook for exports, which are a key driver of factory output in China, according to economists.

China’s exports rose by just 16.8 percent in the first two months of this year, according to government data released earlier in the week.

This compared with 41.5 percent growth in exports in the same period in 2007.

The problems in the US economy are said to be contributing to weakening exports, which saw China’s trade surplus shrink to $8.56 billion in February, a third of the figure a year earlier.

“Exporters are facing big problems and they are unable to make profit,” said Andy Xie, an independent economist based in Shanghai.

“(This is) partly because of the appreciation of the yuan and another significant reason is the increases in raw material prices.”

The Chinese currency, the yuan, has strengthened by about three percent since the beginning of the year, in a rise seen as engineered by policy-makers to accommodate foreign requests for a smaller Chinese trade surplus.

Another reason for the weakening industrial growth was the worst winter weather in decades, which stifled transportation networks for several weeks in late January and early February, economists said.

Observers said the coming months could see further slowdowns in industrial output growth as the government seeks to cool inflation, which hit a near 12-year high of 8.7 percent in February.

“With heightened inflation risks, we expect further tightening measures by the government coupled with a gradual softening in exports will likely lead to downward pressure on industrial activities in the coming quarters,” investment bank Goldman Sachs said in a research note.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
Inflation top concern for China

BEIJING, March 18: China’s central bank said on Tuesday it would increase the amount of money commercial banks must keep in reserve, just hours after Premier Wen Jiabao warned inflation was a top concern.

The People’s Bank of China said in a statement the bank reserve ratio would rise half a percentage point to 15.5 per cent from March 25, in yet another bid to implement tight monetary policies and cool the economy.

The rise is “to strengthen management of liquidity in the banking system and to guide the rational growth in money supply and credit,” the bank said.

Analysts said the move was likely a signal that China is serious about controlling price increases after Wen identified inflation control as a top priority for 2008.

“We need to ensure the fast yet steady economic development in the country and at the same time we need to effectively hold down inflation,” the premier said in an annual press conference following the end of parliament.

The reserve ratio hike, the second this year and the 12th since the beginning of 2007, reduces the amount of money flowing through the economy.

China’s inflation rate hit a near 12-year high of 8.7 per cent in February, while its economy expanded by 11.4 per cent in 2007.

The latest move will freeze 200 billion yuan in the banking system, according to estimates.

Analysts argued the fact that China’s monetary authorities decided to act first on the required reserve ratio could suggest an interest rate hike might now be a more distant prospect.

“The fact that the central bank decided to take the move on the required reserve ratio front at this moment indeed suggests lower risk of a near-term interest rate hike,” investment bank JP Morgan said in a research note.

It said it expected three interest rate hikes in the second half of 2008, but none in the near term. It also said the required reserve ratio could possibly rise to 17 per cent this year.

Inflation top concern for China -DAWN - Business; March 19, 2008
 
Dell to buy $52 billion components from China

Thu Mar 20, 2008 7:20am EDT

By Kirby Chien

BEIJING (Reuters) - Dell Inc (DELL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) plans to buy $23 billion of components from China this year and $29 billion in 2009, helping it reduce costs while the company's main market, the United States, is facing recession.

The commoditization of computer hardware means competition is more a function of price and efficiency than quality and branding, making China a favorite place to source a broad range of goods, including electronic components.

"China is critical to Dell's global supply chain," founder and Chief Executive Michael Dell told reporters on Thursday.

"Dell will purchase $70 billion of computer-related supplies and equipment from China," he said, referring to total purchases over the 2007-2009 period.

The world's second-largest personal computer maker, Dell is far from alone in looking to China to reduce manufacturing costs and remain competitive.

Last November, Cisco Systems Inc (CSCO.O: Quote, Profile, Research) said it would almost double its purchasing from Chinese suppliers over five years to $16 billion.

Cisco is the biggest maker of routers, switches and other equipment that make up the Internet.

Hardware makers such as Dell, Cisco and Hewlett-Packard (HPQ.N: Quote, Profile, Research) (HP) could be hit hard by a U.S. economic downturn, Dell even more so because it relies on the U.S. for about half of its revenue, a much higher proportion than larger rival HP.

That makes China's role as a customer equally important to Dell, which saw a 54 percent rise in unit sales on the mainland during its last financial quarter.

"China is one of the most dynamic and fastest-growing economies in the world, and we've made significant business and social investments here in the past 10 years," said Michael Dell.

Dell's presence in China includes two manufacturing operations in the south, a product design centre in Shanghai -- one of the company's largest -- and a sales support centre in the north east for customers in Japan and Korea.

The company lost top market-share spot to HP in 2006 as consumers favored buying notebook PCs in stores, leading it to abandon last year a long-standing direct-only sales model.

It now sells PCs in retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc (WMT.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Carrefour SA (CARR.PA: Quote, Profile, Research) in Europe and China's GOME Electrical Appliances Holding Ltd (0493.HK: Quote, Profile, Research).

Dell was speaking at an event to celebrate 10 years of operations in China.

($=7.06 yuan)

(Reporting by Kirby Chien; Editing by David Hulmes


Dell to buy $52 billion components from China | Reuters
 
Why China is the REAL master of the universe
By ANTHONY BROWNE
Daily Mail, UK
11th April 2008

Cecil Rhodes, the businessman-imperialist of Africa, the creator of Rhodesia, suffered no flicker of doubt about who were the masters.

"To be born an Englishman," he mused, "Is to win first prize in the lottery of life."

It wasn't idle boasting. In the jingoistic triumphalism of the late 19th century, when waving the Union Jack was a simple pleasure, people sang: "Rule Britannia! Britannia, rule the waves" without any irony. It was a statement of fact.

A quarter of mankind lived under the British flag in the largest empire the world had ever known.

And many of those parts that weren't under Britain's rule - such as the U.S. - had been created by Britain.

British missionaries had opened up the Dark Continent almost unchallenged.

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Eastern promise: Chinese factory workers line up for their morning roll call

The British Army found it easier to invade troublesome nations - or most of them - than it does nowadays.

Britain was the workshop of the world, dominating science, manufacturing and trade.

To many Victorians, unquestioning of the ideology that underpinned much imperialism, British supremacy was a simple matter of racial supremacy - Europeans, and the English in particular, were fated to be the masters.

The truth is that we are masters of the world no more.

The global power shift from the West to the East is no longer just a matter of debate confined to learned journals and newspaper columns - it is a reality that is beginning to have a huge impact on our daily lives.

What would those Victorian masters of old have made of the fact that Chinese security men were on the streets of London this week, ordering our own police about and fighting running battles with British protesters while bewildered athletes carried the Olympic torch on its relay through the capital?

It was a brazen display of how confident China has become of its new place in the world, just as the British Government's failure to take a firm stand on Chinese abuses of human rights shows how craven we have become.

The dire warnings from the International Monetary Fund this week that the West now faces the largest financial shock since the Great Depression, while the Asian economies are still powering ahead, simply underlines our vulnerability in this new world order.

The desperately weakened American dollar appears to be on the verge of losing its global dominance, in the same way as sterling lost it a lifetime ago.

The credit crunch has brought home to all of us in Britain how over-reliant our country has become on financial services. Meanwhile, the loss of our manufacturing industries to Asia continues unabated.

Last month, an Indian company, Tata, bought up what was once the cream of British manufacturing - Jaguar and Land Rover.

A couple of years ago, Nanjing Automotive, a Chinese company, snapped up MG Rover.

Just as the 19th century was the British century, and the 20th century was the American century, the 21st century is the Asian century.

But the handover of global power from the UK to the U.S. was trivial compared to what is happening now.

The U.S. was Britain's offspring, based on the same values and the same language.
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The boys in blue: Chinese security men escorting the Olympic torch on the streets of London last weekend. Many were shocked by their heavy-handed tactics

It, too, was an Anglo-Saxon country, and passing the baton across the Atlantic ensured the continuation of the Anglo-Saxon world order, based on democracy, free trade and a belief in human rights, upheld through international institutions that both powers supported.

But the world order we have grown used to - and comfortable with - over the last century is coming to an end.

Napoleon III compared China to a sleeping giant and warned: "When China awakes, she will shake the world."

After a long hibernation, China, and her 1.3 billion people - twice the population of the U.S. and EU combined - is awaking almost overnight.

And not just China. The world's second most populous country, India, is industrialising at a historically unprecedented pace.

Their economies are growing on a long-term basis about four times the speed of the UK's and that of the United States. Goldman Sachs, the bank, recently predicted that by 2050, China and India would have overtaken the U.S. to be the world's first and second biggest economies.

We have long heard about the benefits this brings, in terms of plentiful cheap goods from toys to TVs, and huge opportunities for Western companies to sell their wares in these booming markets.

But there are also downsides, which are becoming more apparent. Unskilled workers in the West have become unsettled by the threat to their jobs as production moves East.

The most vulnerable Western workers have found their wages stagnate as they struggle to compete in an increasingly global market place.

And competition for raw materials is pitting East against West.

The economic explosion of China, and to a lesser extent India, has given them an almost overpowering hunger for raw materials with which to build their factories, homes and cars.

Wherever you turn, the rise of Asia is making its impact felt on our existence.

Every time you complain about the price of petrol being over £1 a litre, it is to the Far East you have to look to find the culprits.

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Traditional image: The Great Wall of China stands tribute to its turbulent past ...

There are even reports that manholes in Britain have been disappearing to feed the monstrous appetite for scrap steel in the other side of the world.

China is spending 35 times as much on crude oil as it did eight years ago, and 23 times as much on copper.

As it builds gleaming skyscrapers on its fields, China alone consumes half the world's cement and a third of its steel.

What is happening is so extraordinary that economists have had to invent a new word for it - this is not an economic cycle, but a supercycle, a shift in the world economy of historic proportions.

When demand increases and supply stands still, prices shoot up. Iron, wheat and oil are all at record prices, despite slackening demand in the faltering Western economies.

The cost of living in Britain is now rising faster than wages, making the British on average poorer year on year.

Asia's expansion means that its influence is starting to be felt more directly around the world.

Asian countries are not just buying up foreign raw materials, but as their companies try to become global leaders, they are buying up Western companies.

It is not just Land Rover, Jaguar and MG Rover. The Malaysian company Proton owns Lotus. Indian company Tata owns Corus, once British Steel, as well as Tetley Tea.

The hunger for raw materials is also making China lose its shyness and venture out into the world. Like Germany and Russia, China has traditionally been a land empire, focusing its expansionist energies on countries it had borders with, and it eschewed the world-conquering exploits of Europe's sea-faring maritime nations.

Europeans have, for half a millennium, been unchallenged as the global colonisers, but last month the respected Economist magazine dubbed the Chinese "The New Colonists".

While the Congo in central Africa was once over-run by Belgians, it is now the Chinese that can be found wondering around its mining belts.

In Lubumbashi, the capital of the Congo's copper-rich region Katanga, the Economist reported "a sudden Chinese invasion".

Troubled Angola recently shunned Western financial aid because of the amount of Chinese money pouring into it, in return for commodities.

From Kazakhstan to Indonesia to Latin America, Chinese firms are gobbling up oil, gas, coal and metals.

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... while horrific traffic jams are a sign of its present and future

Canadian authorities were recently alarmed to find the Chinese interested in exploring the Arctic Ocean, in a bid to get a share of the minerals beneath the thawing icecap.

In eastern Siberia, Russians worry that China is by default taking over their empty land.

The West has long seen Africa as its backyard, but Western diplomats now worry that not just Africa, but South America, too, is being lost to China.

And Western governments are concerned that the rules of the game are changing. Most worryingly, as China's brutal suppression of the once independent Tibet shows, this is not a superpower that respects Western standards on human rights.

From Darfur to Myanmar, China is cuddling up to murderous dictators.

At home, it holds mass executions of criminals with bullets in the back of the head while transplant surgeons stand by to harvest their still pulsating organs.

Yet Western governments have been in such awe of China's looming power that their response has not been to challenge its abuses, but to try to silence their own protesters at home.

From the UN to the IMF to the World Bank, the international institutions that attempt to govern the planet were made in the image of the victors of World War II. Now power is shifting from West to East, the whole liberal democratic world order will face its first serious challenge in decades.

Many fear that things could get ugly.

There is only one thing worse than an unchallenged superpower - it is a superpower with a victim mentality, which feels the world owes it a favour.

And the bitter truth is that, after centuries of humiliation in foreign affairs, there is a nationalist mood in China that the country's time has come again, that it can again claim its rightful place as the world's most powerful country.

Its comparative weakness over the last few centuries is, in fact, but a blip in the last 2,000 years, during which China was the world's most economically and culturally advanced nation.

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launch of the Tata Nano: The Chinese company has now taken over British manufactuing giants Land Rover and Jaguar

It is an accident of history that Europeans took advantage of their window of opportunity in the last half of the second millennium to take over the world.

The cause was a combination of factors such as the development of maritime technology in Europe, the competition between European countries that drove them to look outwards and find new ways to increase prosperity, and the fact China remained firmly locked in its agrarian, introspective past.

Now things have changed, and already the shift in the world economy is starting to have dramatic effects on migration patterns.

The emigration of poor people from China and India to the West is slowing down, as their citizens see more hope in their own rapidly advancing nations.

Instead, their expanding middle classes are paying large fees for their children to enjoy a Western university education, before returning home.

There are now 60,000 Chinese students in Britain, more than from any other country.

Westerners have become accustomed to being the only tourists in the world's tourist hotspots, but the Chinese and Indians want to enjoy the fruits of their labour by expanding their horizons, too.

Chinese tourists are likely to replace American tourists as popular irritants in Britain, and replace the Germans as competitors for the ski lifts.

As the opportunities flow from West to East, so too do the people.

India is luring the global Indian diaspora back, with laws that would be judged racist in Britain, offering visas to anyone living in the West with Indian blood in their veins.

Even some non-Indian Westerners are heading East for opportunities greater than they find at home.

The West's cultural supremacy is likely to be as challenged as its economic supremacy.

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Under construction: The Chinese Olympic Stadium which will be used this summer. The event has already attracted huge controversy

As their economic confidence grows, Asians are discovering pride in their own cultures and are less inclined to mimic Western ones.

There is an infectious confidence in Bollywood, and the price of Chinese antiques is rocketing as the newly rich Chinese decide they want a slice of their history. Western culture, like the dollar, will soon find its heyday behind it.

But Western attitudes will change as well, with a likely shift to the political Right. White liberal guilt, the driving force behind political correctness, will subside as Westerners feel threatened by the global order changing, and their supremacy slipping away.

Anti-Americanism will disappear as Europeans realise how much better it was to have a world super power that was a democracy (however flawed) not a dictatorship.

There is even speculation that the intense economic pressure on countries such as Britain will cause them to trim down their bloated welfare state, simply because it will no longer be affordable at present levels.

Western attitudes of superiority to China and the rest of the East will also subside, as Westerners realise they are no longer the masters of the world.

The U.S. company Orient Express complained when Tata tried to buy it, that any association with the Indian company would damage the Orient Express's premium brand.

Responding, R K Krishna Kumar, a senior Tata executive, thundered that "Indian companies ... will take their rightful place in the international arena.

"Enterprises and individuals must recognise and adapt to these fundamental economic changes. We believe that those with a fossilised frame of mind risk being marginalised."

In a world in which we are no longer masters, it is a warning that we ignore at our peril.
 
Excellent read Happy Feet, thanks for posting.
 
China’s reserves hit $1.682trn

BEIJING, April 11: China’s foreign exchange reserves, already the world’s largest, climbed to $1.682 trillion at the end of March, the central bank said on Friday.

The figure reflects a rise of 39.9 per cent from a year earlier, and a 10.1 per cent increase from the end of 2007, according to data posted on the People’s Bank of China’s website.

The fast forex growth came amid rising official concerns of a fresh surge in hot money inflows, spurred by a strengthening yuan and a widening spread between falling US interest rates and rising Chinese rates.

The forex reserves climbed $153.9 billion in the first quarter, more than double the amount of money that came into the country through the trade surplus and foreign direct investment during that period.

“The likelihood of China being taken as a harbour by international capital, especially hot money, is increasing,” Friday’s Shanghai Securities News quoted Zhang Yutai, director of a key think tank under the cabinet, as saying.

“It will further worsen the excess liquidity in the country and add pressure on the yuan to rise,” said Zhang of the Development Research Centre of the State Council.—AFP

China’s reserves hit $1.682trn -DAWN - Business; April 12, 2008
 
but China also hv many problems in development .CPI increasing,real estate bulbing,stock market,environment protection,Taiwan issue etc.another thing:the world is not calm.not every nation treats China well.
 
Exposed: China's red billionaire village

Exposed: China's red billionaire village
By Poon Siu-tao

HONG KONG - China's Nanjie village, also known as the "red billionaire village", has been touted as the last stronghold of socialism amid the capitalist-style economic reforms that have swept the country over past three decades. Its huge success, with economic growth outpacing even the country's remarkable expansion over the period, has now been exposed as a fraud.

The village has become practically bankrupt, weighed down by 1.7 billion yuan (US$243 million) in net debts. It will take at least 200 years for the village to pay back the debts, according to Wen Wei Po, a pro-Beijing daily in Hong Kong. It is now clear that state coffers and state-owned banks have paid a dear price for setting up this model example of socialism.

With a population of little more than 3,000, Nanjie, in Lingyi



county of Henan province in central China, has been of special significance in the country's political life by persisting in following the so-called socialist road of the Mao Zedong era. Villagers still lead a collective life as they did decades ago, sing revolutionary songs and chant Mao slogans every day. The entrance to the village features gigantic statues of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Mao.

But there is a world of difference compared with an average Chinese village decades ago. All Nanjie villagers live in villas, own their private sedans and have deep pockets, attracting to the village the sobriquet of "red billionaire village", reflecting its combination of socialism with a market economy.

Nanjie somehow created its own "economic miracle", apparently against the tide of the country's sweeping market-oriented economic reforms, and maintained high-speed growth for more than 20 years.

Doubts about how it managed this are now being cleared up as more facts become known. This so-called socialist collective body started from scratch by running rural enterprises in the late 1980s. Their businesses began with brick manufacturing and flour processing, then extended to food processing and pharmacy.

There are now more than 20 enterprises collectively run by the village, employing more than 10,000 migrant workers - Nanjie villagers themselves do not really need to work. The village administration has taken care of everything for them, from clothing, food, housing to transport, from birth to death. Each village official has on average a monthly salary of a mere 250 yuan.

Nearly all villages across the country have run rural enterprises and exploit migrant workers. What has puzzled outsiders is how Nanjie maintained such strong growth while nearly all other rural enterprises have been gradually eliminated by market competition because of their poor management and low efficiency. It now turns out that Nanjie's secret weapon was "capital".

After 1989, (when pro-reform protests in Beijing's Tiananmen Square and elsewhere were suppressed), China's political winds turned to the "left". At that time, Nanjie happened to be upholding "the great banner of Comrade Mao Zedong" and sticking to the socialist road of "becoming rich collectively". This was noticed by a leader from the capital who appraised the village and under direct or indirect instructions, the Agricultural Bank of China became the ATM machine for Nanjie. By 1998, the amount of loans it granted to Nanjie were seven times those issued in 1991.

According to the Southern Metropolis News, Feng Shizheng, an associate professor in sociology with Renmin University in Beijing, who has researched bank loans to Nanjie, concluded: "Nanjie's high-speed economic growth relied on bank loans, not on its own [capital] accumulation." In Feng's view, Nanjie is a typical example of "high growth, low efficiency". Only with the support of huge bank loans could Nanjie's economic growth outpace the national average amid an economic efficiency that fell below the national average.

Thus the village's secret is very simple. Some person or persons, to demonstrate the correctness of Mao Zedong thought and to save what little that had been left by socialism, ignored risks to have banks lend large sums to Nanjie to set up and maintain this model example of socialism.

Once it became the model, the state had to throw in more capital to ensure the village continued to shine. However, the government leader who instigated the process has retired and the Agricultural Bank of China, undertaking a restructuring to become a joint-stock bank, can no longer issue loans solely on a political basis. As a result, Nanjie now finds it difficult to obtain low-interest loans. Not only that, it is under increasing pressures to repay what it has borrowed.

To reduce its debts, companies run by the village have in recent years turned to marketing a soybean seed in the name of Spaceflight II. They claimed that after the seeds were sent out into space their genes underwent a mutation that would increase their harvest by 30%. Of course this was completely fictitious. Many farmers who bought the seeds lost their investment.

For Nanjie, it seems one misfortune comes out in the wake of another. When former village chief Wang Jinzhong died in May 2003, he was found to have kept in a vault in his office 20 million yuan in cash and several property ownership certificates under his own name, remarkable for an official with a monthly salary of 250 yuan. To make it worse, several women carrying babies came to his funeral service claiming to be his concubines and demanded shares in his legacy.

Disillusion with the Nanjie "myth" has cost the state coffers more than 1 billion yuan, while letting people become aware that any artificial distortion of market operations goes against economic laws and cannot last long.

Poon Siu-tao is a freelance writer for the Chinese edition of Asia Times Online.
 
China to face 7.3m tonnes LPG shortfall by 2010

BEIJING: China will face a shortfall of 7.3 million tonnes in liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) supply by 2010 due to surging demand in the countryside and small and medium-sized cities, state media reported Monday.

According to the development plan of the country’s oil industry, domestic demand of LPG is forecast to hit 26.2 million tonnes in 2010, while supply is expected to stand at only 18.9 million tonnes, the Xinhua news agency said.

As domestic energy sources are drying up, China has been keen to explore resources overseas in areas such as in Africa and South America. afp

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
China’s inflation rises to near decade high

BEIJING: China's inflation in April rose to near decade-high levels despite official efforts to cool surging living costs ahead of the Beijing Olympics, according to data reported Monday.

But some analysts suggested the government faced the possibility of more sharp price hikes.

“Underlying inflationary pressures remain undiminished,” Goldman Sachs economists Yu Song and Hong Liang warned in a report.

The government ordered banks to increase their reserves for a fourth time this year in a move meant to contain inflation by curbing lending, but it gave no indication whether it would boost interest rates.

April's consumer prices rose by 8.5 percent over the same month last year, the National Bureau of Statistics reported. That was a rebound from March's 8.3 percent rate and below February's 8.7 percent _ the highest in 12 years.

Premier Wen Jiabao has said taming inflation is Beijing's priority. The government said in March it hoped to hold price rises to 4.8 percent this year a target that looks increasingly unlikely.

Inflation jumped in mid-2007 as China ran short of pork, grain and some other food items. The government has assured the public that the country has enough grain and is paying farmers to raise more pigs. But efforts to boost food supplies were disrupted by severe winter storms.

April inflation was driven by a 22.1 percent jump in food prices, including 68.3 percent for pork over the same month last year, 46.6 percent for cooking oil and 13.6 percent for vegetables.

“Recent surges in global grain prices increase the risk that domestic grain prices may lead (to) another wave of food price inflation in the months to come,” Lehman Brothers economist Mingchun Sun said in a report to clients.

Beijing has imposed price controls on basic food items. But costs of energy and raw materials are rising, adding to pressure for producers to pass along higher prices to consumers. Producer prices, an indicator of future inflation, rose by 8.1 percent in April.

Chinese families spend up to half their incomes on food, and rising prices, coupled with surging housing costs, are eroding income gains from an economy that expanded by 10.6 percent in the first quarter.

There have been no reports of demonstrations like those in Bangladesh, Egypt and elsewhere over food prices. But bouts of high inflation in China in the 1980s and 1990s sparked protests _ a scenario that the government is eager to avoid happening again as it prepares for the Summer Olympics, meant to showcase China as a prosperous, stable society.

In an effort to curb inflation, the government has hiked interest rates repeatedly and tried to shrink the amount of money available for lending by forcing banks to set aside more reserves.

The latest order Monday by the central bank boosted the amount of deposits that banks must hold in reserve by 0.5 percentage points to 16.5 percent _ the highest level to date.

But economists say Chinese bank deposits are growing so fast that such modest reserve increases have no direct impact on lending and are meant as a signal to bankers to reduce credit. Also Monday, customs data showed China's trade surplus fell by 1 percent in April. That could help to ease inflation pressure by reducing the amount of money flooding into the booming economy.

China's global trade surplus fell to $16.8 billion amid weaker demand for Chinese goods, according to the Chinese customs agency.

The trade surplus with Europe jumped by 34.8 percent to $12 billion while that with the United States saw much slower growth, rising by 4 percent to $13 billion.

The growing Chinese trade gap with the 27-nation European Union has prompted the EU to join Washington in lobbying Beijing to ease currency controls and import barriers.

The surge in exports to Europe is due in part to the rise in the euro against China's currency, the yuan, which makes Chinese goods more attractive to European consumers. The dollar, by contrast, has fallen against the yuan, making Chinese goods more expensive for Americans. ap

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
China forex reserves hit $1.76 trillion

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

BEIJING: China’s stockpile of foreign exchange reserves, already the largest in the world, increased a record $74.46 billion in April to $1.75666 trillion, a source familiar with the data told Reuters on Monday.

The leap surpassed the previous monthly record of $61.6 billion set in January. It was more than three times greater than the $24.3 billion that flowed into China in April from the trade surplus and foreign direct investment a strong indication for many economists that speculative capital is still pouring into the country.

The source declined to be identified because he is not allowed to speak officially to the media. China’s official foreign exchange reserves have now risen $228.5 billion in the first four months of the year compared with $461.9 billion in all of 2007.

April’s surge almost half the first-quarter increase of $154 billion occurred even though the yuan’s CNYCFXS pace of appreciation slowed to a crawl last month, reducing the currency’s short-term attraction to hot-money investors.

Economic policy makers at the highest reaches of the Chinese government have met periodically to examine the issue of hot money inflows, which complicate the People’s Bank of China’s (PBOC) task of managing the money supply.

The PBOC has to buy most of the dollars that flow into China in order to hold down the yuan’s exchange rate. The central bank then has to sterilise the impact on the money supply by mopping up the domestic currency it creates in the process.

Senior officials reached no firm conclusion at their most recent meeting, agreeing only to keep monitoring the problem, a second source said. Reserves in April grew by more than the combined inflows from China’s trade surplus and FDI for the fourth month in a row. But not all economists pin the blame on speculative inflows.

Some say most of the sustained increase can be explained by valuation changes affecting non-dollar holdings, a growing stream of income earned on the reserves stockpile and an explosion of onshore dollar lending.

However, the volume of dollar loans dropped sharply in April, the central bank’s monthly money supply figures showed. The PBOC publishes the reserves data every quarter. The next figures are due in July.

China forex reserves hit $1.76 trillion
 
China’s forex reserves hit $1.8 trillion :china:

SHANGHAI: China’s foreign exchange reserves, by far the largest in the world, hit $1.80 trillion at the end of May, state media reported Friday.

The figure represents an increase of $40.3 billion for the month, down from $74.5 billion recorded in the previous month, the China Securities Journal reported. It said the main reason for the drop was due to a cut in the amount of speculative capital flowing into the country.

“There was a significant change in May regarding capital inflow — the inflow of ‘hot money’ dipped sharply,” it said, citing Ding Zhijie, economist with Beijing’s University of International Business and Economics.

The foreign exchange regulator’s efforts to strengthen supervision of cross-border capital flows have started to bear fruit but a turnaround in the trend of international capital flowing into China is unlikely, Ding said.

State media reported last week that China’s foreign exchange regulator had ordered banks to submit monthly data on non-resident domestic currency accounts in order to curb incoming speculative capital.

Speculative money is entering China as investors hope for gains from factors such as the continued strengthening of the yuan.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 
China’s foreign debt rises to $392.6 billion

BEIJING: China’s foreign debt rose five percent in the first quarter, with short-term debt, an indicator of capital inflows speculating on a stronger yuan, accounting for nearly all the increase.

Overall foreign debt rose to $392.6 billion at the end of March from $373.6 billion at the end of 2007, the foreign exchange regulator said on Friday.

Short-term debt accounted for $16.6 billion, or 88 percent, of the $18.97 billion increase. Total short-term debt reached $236.7 billion at the end of March, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said. Medium- and long-term debt rose by $2.3 billion in the first quarter to $155.9 billion.

Short-term debt accounted for 60.3 percent of China’s total foreign debt at the end of March, the agency said, up from 58.9 percent at the end of December.

China’s short-term foreign debt was equivalent to just 14.1 percent of its $1.6822 trillion in foreign exchange reserves as of the end of March. Beijing has been trying to limit inflows of speculative money by curbing short-term foreign exchange borrowings.

Daily Times - Leading News Resource of Pakistan
 

China's economy to become world's biggest
Wednesday, 9 July 2008 11:17


China's economy will overtake that of the US by 2035 and be twice its size by mid-century, a new study by a US research organisation concludes.

The report, by economist Albert Keidel of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said China's rapid growth is driven by domestic demand more than exports, which will be sustainable over the coming decades.

'China's economic performance clearly is no flash in the pan,' Keidel writes. 'Its growth this decade has averaged more than 10% a year and is still going strong in the first half of 2008. Because its success in recent decades has not been export-led but driven by domestic demand, its rapid growth can continue well into the 21st century, unfettered by world market limitation.'
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Keidel, who has worked as a World Bank economist and US Treasury official, said the rise of China to the world's biggest economy will happen regardless of the method of calculation.

Under current market-based estimates, China's gross domestic product is about $3 trillion compared to $14 trillion for the US. Based on purchasing power parity (PPP) measure used by the World Bank and others to correct low labour-cost distortions, he said China's GDP is roughly half of that of the US.

Keidel's calculations suggest that using the PPP method, China will catch up with the US as an economic power by 2020, with an equivalent GDP of $18 trillion. Based on the more commonly accepted market method, the turning point will come by 2035. By 2050, he estimated Chinese GDP at some $82 trillion compared with $44 trillion for the US.

However, the Chinese standard of living will remain lower - with per capita GDP in China between half and two-thirds the level of that in the US in 2050, according to the report. keidel said poverty will remain a significant problem in China for decades despite considerable progress.
 
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BEIJING, June 7 (Xinhua) -- Passenger car sales in China in the first five months of 2008 rose 17.41 percent over the same period a year earlier, an industry group said on Friday.

According to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM), car sales reached 3.02 million units, including 2.23 million sedans, 179,200 sport-utility vehicles (SUV) and 93,200 multi-utility vehicles (MUV) in the period.

Sales of passenger cars, SUV, and MUV in May alone totaled 564,600, up 16 percent over the same month last year. The growth rate was quicker than April's 11 percent.

Auto sales in China were expected to exceed 10 million units this year, which would represent a full year sales growth of 14 percent, CAAM said.

Auto sales have maintained double-digit growth since the beginning of the year, in contrast to weakening sales in much of the world's other major auto markets.
 
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