China expects to realize 8 % economic growth target
Economic Growth Headlines
Vice Premier: China´s economic development trend remains unchanged.
Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang stated that the basic trend
of the country's economic development has not change
despite challenges brought about by the global financial crisis.
The annual China Development Forum opened on March 22, 2009 in Beijing
with a focus on China's development and reform amid the global financial crisis.
The meeting comes ahead of the Group of 20 summit planned for April 2 in London.
At the opening ceremony of China's Development Forum, Li Keqiang stated that
"Currently, China's economic growth rate is still the fastest in the world.
China is at a stage where its industrialization and urbanization is speeding up.
The prospect for the domestic market is good. The Chinese economy has great room
for development. China has ample manpower and plenty of funds. The Chinese
government has made resolute decisions while facing challenges. Macro-economic
policies have been adjusted quickly. The Chinese government has adopted a series
of measures with the focus of tackling the financial crisis and maintaining
steady and fast economic growth. These measures have yielded and will further
yield positive effects. We have confidence and conditions, and are capable of
maintaining China's economic stability."
Althougth the world economy's future is still not clear, China expects to
succeed in realising its target growth rate goal of 8 percent.
Zheng Jingping, chief information officer at the National Bureau of
Statistics, states he is confident that China can go against the negative global
trend.
"As a big country and economy, China can offset the impact from the
outside by stimulating domestic demand. Second, China is still on a track of
development, which means we are still in the process of industrialization,
urbanization, marketization and globalization. Third, China's financial sector
is comparatively healthy and stable." Stephan Green, chairman of HSBC, the
world's largest banking group, stated that the current financial crisis will
bring both challenges and opportunities for major Chinese banks. "The
reform of the Chinese financial sector put the country's domestic banks on a
solid position to weather the storm, with a number of institutions now ranking
the world's most capitalized. The discrediting of the over-levered high-risk
models common among many western financial institutions will provide
opportunities for Chinese banks to fill the gap."
Vice premier underscores growth target, international
cooperation
Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang addressed the opening ceremony of the
China Development Forum 2009 in Beijing on March 22, 2009.
Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang said in Beijing on Sunday China is
confident and capable of achieving its 2009 economic targets and will strengthen
cooperation with the international community to fight the global financial
crisis.
Despite the financial crisis
impact that increased difficulties for economic operations, "the
fundamentals of Chinese economy and its good outlook in the long term have not
changed," said Li at the opening of the China Development Forum 2009.
China has set an 8-percent target
for annual economic expansion this year after diminishing foreign orders dented
exports and slowed growth to a seven-year low of 9 percent year-on-year in 2008.
To boost domestic consumption and
growth, the government will exert itself to tackle issues of immediate concern
to ordinary Chinese citizens such as employment, education, health care, housing
and environmental protection, said Li.
The country will speed up the
building of a social security system covering both urban and rural
residents and gradually perfect the social safety net that guarantees people's
basic livelihood, he said. "This helps adjust income distribution and raise
people's spending capabilities."
In addition, Li pledged stronger
moves in reforming pricing, taxation and financial mechanisms to remove "institutional
barriers" on the way of development.
Reform plans must be well-implemented,
said Li. They included an 850 billion yuan ($124 billion) medical reform plan
and a comprehensive value-added tax (VAT) reform to cut enterprise and
individual burdens by approximately 500 billion yuan this year.
Li also promised to maintain a
stable scale of foreign trade and use of foreign capital, saying China will
further open up and make use of markets and resources both at home and abroad.
China's foreign direct investment
fell for the fifth consecutive month in February to $5.83 billion, down 15.81
percent year-on-year. Its foreign trade was $124.95 billion last month, down
24.9 percent year-on-year.
"While managing its own
affairs well, China is willing to join hands with other countries and play an
active role in international cooperation against the financial crisis,"
said Li.
The continuous growth of China's
economy not only concerns the wellbeing of 1.3 billion Chinese but is also a
great contribution to the world economy, he told the forum.
He called on all countries to
take actions together to promote future growth of the world economy, saying the
crisis should bring about "profound thinking about the world economic
development and the human kind's future destiny".
People of insight in all
countries should dig the deep roots of the global financial crisis and explore
effective ways of preventing the crisis from spreading and avoiding a replay of
such crises, said Li.
The China Development Forum 2009 runs in Beijing from Saturday to Monday with
the theme of China's Development and Reform in the Global Financial Crisis.
Xinhua 2009-03-22
China has conditions to achieve 8% growth target
China has conditions to achieve the 8 percent economic growth target this
year, Zhang Yutai, president of the Development Research Center of the State
Council said here Sunday at the China Development Forum 2009.
BEIJING, March 22 (Xinhua) -- Conditions are favorable for China to achieve
the 8 percent economic growth target it set this year, Zhang Yutai, president of
the Development Research Center of the State Council said here Sunday at the
China Development Forum 2009.
Zhang's conclusion was based on the 4-trillion-yuan
(585 billion U.S. dollars) economic stimulus package, 500-billion-yuan tax cut
and industry support plans. These would help boost the economy, he said.
According to preliminary statistics, the 4-trillion-yuan
stimulus package was expected to contribute 1.5 percent to 1.9 percent to the
economic growth this year, Zhang said.
The country's gross domestic product (GDP) rose 9
percent last year. The Chinese government has set an 8 percent GDP growth target
for 2009.
However, the World Bank forecast China's GDP would
grow 7.5 percent in 2009. The bank Wednesday cut its forecast for China's 2009
economic growth yet again to 6.5 percent from 7.5 percent. Its prediction stood
at 9.2 percent Last November.
China's economic development was facing three major
challenges -- the global financial crisis, periodical economic adjustment and
extensive economic growth model, he said.
Beginning late last year, the government announced
aggressive measures to ease the domestic impact of the global downturn. These
included a 4-trillion-yuan stimulus package, a plan to expand rural home
appliance purchases and support plans for key industries.
These measures were timely and decisive, and had
helped boost market confidence, said HSBC Group chairman Stephen Green.
China was in the stage of urbanization,
industrialization and consumption upgrading and the fundamental of the country's
economic development remains unchanged, Zhang said.
"There are great potentials in domestic demand,
which are powerful engine to boost China's economic development," he said.
Vice Finance Minister Wang Jun listed five key
aspects where an active fiscal policy could be carried out to enlarge domestic
demand, such as governmental spending, income rise, improvement on living
standard, and technology innovation and energy saving.
To expand governmental investment in national key
construction projects was a most active, most direct and most efficient measure
to stimulate demand, said Wang.
Another measure was to reduce financial burden on
companies and residents through tax cuts, rebates and exemptions.
"The 950 billion yuan fiscal deficit in this
year's national budget accounts for less than 3 percent of GDP. It is under our
total control compared with China's economic foundation and a strengthened
finance," said Wang.
Source: Xinhua March 22, 2009
China has potential to grow by 7%-8% annually in 2
decades
It remains too early to claim that China's economy has started to recover,
although in the long run it still has the potential to grow by 7-8 percent
annually, said economists at the China Development Forum today.
Economic indicators have shown initial signs of an economic recovery in China,
such as the purchasing managers index (PMI), which has been on the rise for the third
consecutive month in February. The fixed-asset investment and retail sales
have also remained strong in the first two months.
"However, we may need to look at the indicators in March and the first
quarter as a whole (to see whether a real recovery has come)," said Zheng
Jingping, statistician from the National Bureau of Statistics.
The fixed-asset investment, for example, had dropped dramatically in the
first two months of 2008 due to the severe storms in a large part of the
country, which may have made this year's investment look exceptionally high, he
said.
The global economic financial crisis, meanwhile, is still worsening and the
world economy may contract by 0.5-1 percent this year, which will affect China's
economic growth, he said.
China's export slumped by 17.5 percent and 25.7 percent in January and
February respectively.
Lawrence Lau, president of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, said at the
forum that China's export would remain resilient and rebound soon.
"Orders for Chinese products have dropped, but it would be a short-term
phenomenon," he said. The US consumption has been on the decline, but it
would decrease dramatically. Moreover, China's export of mainly low-end products
would remain welcome in the overseas markets despite the financial crisis, he
said.
Lau said China's ample resources, such as labor and high savings rate, would
provide back-up for its long-term sustainable growth. "China has the
potential to have its economy grow by 7-8 percent (annually) ... in the
upcoming 10-20 years."
ChinaDaily.com - March 21, 2009
China likely to be 1st economy to regain footing
Officials and representatives from the business community have been offering
up their views at the Development Forum.
Some say that even though China is facing unprecedented challenges, it's
likely to be the first economy in the world to regain its footing.
The Director of Development and Research Center under China's State Council,
Zhang Yutai -- estimates that China's four trillion yuan or 585 billion US
dollar stimulus package -- will likely contribute between one-and-a-half to
nearly two percent to the country's economic growth in 2009.
The figure is based on a preliminary assessment.
Zhang Yutai noted China's economic development is facing three major
challenges. They are the global financial crisis periodical economic adjustments
and an extensive economic growth model.
He says China will tackle the global financial crisis by actively pushing
forward global cooperation. And at the same time adhering to the principles of
mutual interests and benefits.
CCTV 03-22-2009
Wen urges innovation amid economic woes
Premier Wen Jiabao has called on enterprises and officials to place priority
on industrial upgrading and innovation, urging them to move early to ride
through the global financial crisis.
Chinese companies should focus on adjusting product structure, improving
quality and upgrading technologies in the face of economic woes, said Wen during
a visit to enterprises in the northeastern Liaoning Province from Friday to
Sunday.
Efforts should be especially
stepped up to develop new products and foster intellectual property rights,
while the government must cut burdens for enterprises and provide an easy
environment for their innovation, said Wen.
"Intellectual property
rights are in the heart of economic competition in modern times," Wen said,
adding that the government must combine scientific and technological innovation
with the bid to boost economic growth."
When visiting the Anshan Iron and
Steel Group Corporation (Ansteel Group), a major steel producer based in
Laoning's Anshan City, Wen told company officials to speed up phasing out
obsolete technology and strictly control new capacity to curb oversupply in the
steel industry.
Wen emphasized the implementation
of the country's stimulus policies, including a 4 trillion-yuan (585 billion
U.S. dollars) investment package unveiled in November.
"The work should start early
rather than late so that we can take the initiative and see earlier effects,"
said Wen. "Once the time is missed, we may lose the relative initiative
we're enjoying now."
In addition to the 4-trillion-yuan
stimulus package, the Chinese government has also announced a plan to expand
rural home appliance purchases and support plans for ten key industries such as
steel and auto sectors.
China's economy cooled to a
seven-year low of 9 percent last year as the global financial crisis took its
toll.
Wen told local governments to
carry forward the country's strategic reinvigoration of the old industrial bases
in the northeast, which was started in 2003, saying the move laid a sound
foundation for the region to tackle the current downturn.
He encouraged enterprises to
"have a dauntless spirit" in the face of difficulties.
"With this spirit, all
difficulties will be overcome and nothing can beat our country and our people,"
he said.
The Chinese government has set an 8 percent economic growth target for 2009.
Xinhua March 22, 2009
China sees stimulus package bringing growth
BEIJING (AFP) — China's huge stimulus package is expected to contribute at
least 1.5 percent to the nation's economic growth this year, a top official said
Sunday, as the Asian giant continues to fight the crisis.
Zhang Yutai, head of the development research centre of the State Council, or
cabinet, said the four-trillion-yuan (580-billion-dollar) package could
contribute 1.5 to 1.9 percent to China's growth, the official Xinhua news agency
reported.
The figure was a preliminary assessment, Zhang was quoted as saying.
The stimulus package was unveiled in November in a bid to fight the impact of
the global financial crisis.
China has set an economic growth target of about 8.0 percent this year, a
level that the government says it needs in order to keep unemployment at a
manageable level.
However, just over a week ago, Premier Wen Jiabao admitted this target would
be difficult to achieve.
On Wednesday, the World Bank slashed China's economic growth forecast to 6.5
percent in 2009.
AFP March 22, 20090
China’s Stimulus Spending
to Help Growth Reach Target
March 22, 2009 (Bloomberg) -- China’s stimulus spending may add as much as
1.9 percentage points to economic expansion and help the government achieve its
growth target this year, according to the State Council’s research group.
“China has the ability to become the first in the world to step out of the
crisis and keep stable growth for the mid and long term,” Zhang Yutai,
director of the Development Research Center of the State Council, said in a live
broadcast from the China Development Forum in Beijing today.
Vice Premier Li Keqiang reaffirmed China’s goal of 8 percent growth at
today’s forum, saying some industries “have seen signs of recovery.”
China is targeting expansion in 2009 even as economies from the U.S. to Japan
contract. The nation’s economy is showing “early signs” of stabilizing as
government-backed investment counters a slump in exports, the World Bank said
March 18.
Investment in China rose 26.5 percent in the first two months of 2009 and
bank loans quadrupled in February, indications the government’s 4 trillion
yuan ($585 billion) stimulus plan is starting to feed into the economy.
China’s government is battling to boost growth amid tumbling exports,
rising unemployment, falling house prices and the risk of higher loan defaults.
Millions of migrant workers have lost their jobs as declining overseas orders
force factories to scale back production or shut.
Further Spending
Gross domestic product expanded 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter, the
weakest pace in seven years. The economy grew 9 percent for all of last year,
down from 13 percent in 2007.
“China has the potential to further boost domestic spending,” Zhu Zhixing,
vice director of the National Development and Reform Commission, said at the
forum, echoing comments by Premier Wen Jiabao on March 13.
Wen said China has “adequate ammunition” to revive the world’s third-biggest
economy and can add to its 4 trillion yuan stimulus package at any time.
The government’s spending has resulted in a record 950 billion yuan budget
deficit this year. The risk posed by the deficit is “under government control,”
Wang Jun, vice minister of finance, said at the forum.
Not everyone shares China’s optimism it will reach the 8 percent target
this year. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development may cut its
forecast for the nation’s economic growth to as little as 6 percent, Secretary-
General Angel Gurria said March 20, while the International Monetary Fund
expects growth of 6.7 percent.
World Bank
The World Bank last week lowered its forecast for China’s economic growth
this year to 6.5 percent from a November estimate of 7.5 percent.
Still, the lender said China is weathering the global slowdown better than
many because the government quickly implemented its spending plan and its banks
were largely unscathed by the financial crisis.
Financial companies worldwide have suffered more than $1 trillion of
writedowns and credit losses since the market for subprime mortgages collapsed
in 2007, forcing governments from the U.S. to Australia to announce stimulus
packages.
The European Union economy will shrink 3.2 percent this year, the IMF said on
March 19, cutting a January forecast of a 2 percent contraction. Japan’s
economy is forecast to shrink by 5.8 percent, according to the IMF, while the
U.S. is seen contracting 2.6 percent.
China's economy shows signs of stabilization and recovery
On March 18, Premier Wen Jiabao presided over an executive meeting of the
State Council, discussing the economic situation at home and abroad. The
attendees agreed that the international financial crisis is still spreading and
deepening, and that China is still facing huge difficulties despite the signs
that some regions and sectors in China have seen stabilization and recovery.
"Signs of stabilization and recovery" have given China more confidence,
while "the huge difficulties and problems" have made the country more
sober-minded.
The challenges are indeed serious, but opportunities still lie ahead. As long as
the country combines "ensuring growth" with "adjusting structure"
and "improving the economy," it will be able to escape the depression
earlier in time to embrace a splendid spring.
Sign One: Investments maintain rapid growth
In January and February, total investment in fixed assets for all urban and
rural areas was 1.0276 trillion yuan, up 26.5 percent compared to the same
period last year, indicating that the policies for expanding investment have
started to take effect. In the first two months of 2009, 18,533 new projects
were started, an increase of 4,056 projects year-on-year.
Even more splendid was the fact that funding for the projects had been fully
secured. Of urban and rural investments, 1.8367 trillion yuan was appropriated
in a timely fashion, an increase of 33.6 percent year-on-year.
Investment has laid a foundation for the economy of China to escape this
predicament.
Sign Two: Vehicle and building material sales start to recover
In January and February, China's gross retail sales of consumer goods rose 15.2
percent year-on-year to 2.00804 trillion yuan. The growth rate was 5 percentage
points lower than the same period last year.
"The 15.2 percent growth rate is considerably good, since there was
negative growth in the CPI in February this year. The inflation-adjusted growth
is equivalent to that of the same period last year." said Cai Zhizhou, a
researcher at the China Center for National Accounting and Economic Growth at
Peking University.
In terms of industry, the sales for some goods, such as vehicles and building
materials, have also shown signs of recovery, with an increase of 9.3 percent in
the auto industry and growth of 22.4 percent in the building and furnishing
materials industry.
Sign Three: Consumer credit increases rapidly
By the end of February, the broad money supply (M2) was up 20.48 percent
compared with last year and up 1.69 percentage points from the end of the
previous month, far higher than the goal of 17 percent growth in M2 set by China
for 2009, indicating sufficient liquidity. The narrow money supply (M1) grew
10.87 percent year-on-year, an increase of 4.19 percentage points compared to
the end of January showing a slight rise.
This indicates that manufacturing activities have rebounded to some extent, more
credit loans have been transferred to the real economy, and the decrease of
enterprise inventories is expected to be wrapped up earlier than expected.
In February, consumer loans increased to 43.9 billion yuan, up 33.9 billion yuan
year-on-year, maintaining rapid growth momentum through January, showing that
consumer loans are recovering, and that the consumption stimulus policies are
gradually taking effect.
Sign Four: Corporate financial condition improves
Industrial added value in January and February rose 3.8 percent year-on-year,
with industrial added value increasing 11 percent in February year-on-year. In
the same month, the Purchasing Managers Index of China's manufacturing industry
was 49 percent. Specifically, the new orders index and production index bounced
to 50.4 percent and 51.2 percent respectively, surpassing the 50 percent mark
that distinguishes a bull market from a bear market. A trend of economic growth
rebounding is taking shape.
Corporate deposits increased by 995.4 billion yuan, up 808.5 billion yuan year-on-year.
This reveals that the capital turnover and payment abilities of enterprises have
improved.
In addition, China's enterprises consumed 217.3 billion kilowatt-hours of
electricity nationwide in February, up 1.8 percent year-on-year.
Sign Five: Sectors benefiting from "4 trillion stimulus package"
likely to recover first
In February, the production of raw coal, cement and steel nationwide increased
at a relatively fast pace compared with last year. Raw coal output reached
196.565 million tons, an increase of 16 percent year-on-year; the output of
cement grew to 82.9 million tons, an increase of 42.5 percent year-on-year;
while the output of steel climbed to 46.134 million tons, an increase of 8.3
percent year-on-year. Sectors closely linked to the 4 trillion yuan investment
are likely to recover ahead of others.
Sign Six: Signs of recovery in major business sectors in Chongqing
According to the Chongqing Statistics Bureau, signs of recovery have been
emerging in major business sectors in Chongqing since February.
Industrial economy, which was hit hard by the financial crisis, is beginning to
recover showing an upward trend, a contrast to its downward movement in January.
Industrial added value in February increased 18.1 percent year-on-year, and
consumption of electricity by enterprises has basically returned to normal.
There are notable signs of recovery in major business sectors and in industrial
production. Chongqing produced a total of 71,100 automobiles and 469,400
motorcycles, increases of 24.4 percent and 11.4 percent respectively year-on-year.
Rail loading capacity, which had been dwindling from September last year,
stopped falling and climbed from 916 freight cars in February to 1,090 freight
cars in the first week of March, showing clear signs of economic recovery, said
the Department of Economic Operations of the Chongqing Economic Commission.
Sign Seven: Enterprises in Zhejiang Province operating relatively well
The latest survey by the Zhejiang Provincial Bureau of Statistics shows that
enterprises in Zhejiang Province are operating relatively well, and 98 percent
of industrial enterprises above a certain scale have continued operations.
Of the 57,188 enterprises in Zhejiang's database of industrial enterprises above
a certain scale, only 251 enterprises did not continue operations in January,
and 1,037 in February, accounting for 0.4 percent and 1.8 percent respectively.
A survey in early March conducted on enterprises below the certain scale shows
that 71.6 percent of these enterprises maintained normal operations, up 11.4
percentage points compared with last November. Of the enterprises, 11.7 percent
increased their use of labor, and the use of labor in 66.7 percent of the
enterprises was on par with the same period of last year.
Sign Eight: Use of foreign investment in Tianjin maintains its upward trend
Use of foreign capital in Tianjin is maintaining an upward trend, according to
the latest statistics from the Tianjin Municipal Bureau of Statistics.
In February, Tianjin approved 40 new foreign-funded enterprises, with a total of
954 million USD of contracted foreign capital, an increase of 23.6 percent year-on-year.
The amount of foreign capital actually used was 740 million USD, up 25.5 percent
year-on-year. In particular, the Binhai New Area recorded 620 million USD in
contracted foreign capital, accounting for 65 percent of the city's total
contracted foreign capital.
In January and February, the cumulative number of Tianjin's newly-approved
foreign-funded enterprises reached 76, with contracted foreign capital of 2.2
billion USD. The total amount of foreign capital actually used was 1.5 billion
USD, up 20 percent year-on-year.
People's Daily Online March 20, 2009
China's growth forecast
(CNN) MARCH 18, 2009 -- The World Bank cut China's economic growth forecast
in 2009 to 6.5 percent Wednesday, down a full percentage point from November's
projection.
Despite the downgrade, "China is a relative bright spot
in an otherwise gloomy global economy," said the World Bank's David Dollar.
Last week, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao reiterated projections
that the nation's economy will grow by 8 percent in 2009, despite doubts
expressed by domestic and international economic analysts. Some have forecast
growth as low as 5 percent.
"I will admit it will be a difficult job [to reach 8
percent]. This being said, I also believe with considerable efforts it's
possible for us to obtain this goal," Wen said at a news conference
following the annual session of the country's rubber-stamp legislature.
China has seen a sharp decline in demand for its exports
since November as other major economies have struggled. In February, Chinese
exports plunged 25.7 percent compared with the previous year's, Beijing reported
last week.
Even with the slowdown, China's economy -- the third largest
in the world -- has gone from white-hot to merely robust. In 2007, China's gross
domestic product grew at 13 percent.
The two largest economies -- the United States and Japan --
are in recession.
"So a lot of things will go down in 2009 globally,"
Dollar said. "But we see China's contribution as being very positive in
keeping many markets from going down as far as they would otherwise." The
World Bank expects China's economy to outgrow most others in 2009.
In November, China announced plans to
inject $586 billion (4 trillion yuan) into its economy to offset declines in
industrial and export growth. That economic stimulus plan included the loosening
of credit restrictions, tax cuts and massive infrastructure spending.
(CNN) http://edition.cnn.com/2009/WORLD
In Downturn, China Sees Path to Growth
China is using its $600 billion economic stimulus package
to make its companies better able to compete in markets at home and abroad.
By Keith Bradsher - March 17, 2009 New York Times
GUANGZHOU, China — The global economic downturn, and efforts to reverse
it, will probably make China an even stronger economic competitor than it was
before the crisis.
China, the world’s third-largest economy behind the United States and
Japan, had already become more assertive; now it is exploiting its unusual
position as a country with piles of cash and a strong banking system, at a
time when many countries have neither, to acquire natural resources and make
new friends.
Last week, China’s prime minister, Wen Jiabao, even reminded Washington
that as one of the United States’ biggest creditors, China expects
Washington to safeguard its investment.
China’s leaders are turning economic crisis to competitive advantage,
said economic analysts.
The country is using its nearly $600 billion economic stimulus package to
make its companies better able to compete in markets at home and abroad, to
retrain migrant workers on an immense scale and to rapidly expand subsidies
for research and development.
Construction has already begun on new highways and rail lines that are
likely to permanently reduce transportation costs.
And while American leaders struggle to revive lending — in the latest
effort with a $15 billion program to help small businesses — Chinese banks
lent more in the last three months than in the preceding 12 months.
“The recent tweaks to the stimulus package indicate a sharper focus on
the long-term competitiveness of Chinese industry,” said Eswar S. Prasad, a
former China division chief at the International Monetary Fund. “Higher
expenditures on education and research and development, along with amounts
already committed to infrastructure investment, will boost the economy’s
productivity.”
The international economic slowdown is also doing some things that Chinese
authorities had tried and failed to do for four years: slow inflation, reverse
what had been an ever-growing dependence on exports and pop a real estate
bubble before it could grow even bigger.
The recession in most of the large economies in the world is inflicting
real pain here — causing a record plunge in Chinese exports, putting 20
million migrant workers from within China out of their jobs and raising the
potential for increased and sustained social unrest. But as President Hu
Jintao told the National People’s Congress last week, “Challenge and
opportunity always come together — under certain conditions, one could be
transformed into the other.”
To that end, Chinese companies are shopping for foreign businesses to
acquire. The commerce ministry announced late Monday that it was greatly
easing the government approval process for Chinese companies seeking
permission to make foreign acquisitions.
The ministry is now leading its first mergers and acquisitions delegation
of corporate executives to Europe; the executives are looking at companies in
the automotive, textiles, food, energy, machinery, electronics and
environmental protection sectors.
The government initiatives coincide with some immediate benefits of the
slowdown for China. For instance, air freight and ocean shipping costs have
plunged by as much as two-thirds since last summer as demand has fallen.
Blue-collar wages, which had doubled in four years in some coastal cities,
have fallen for many workers this winter, causing personal pain but reviving
China’s advantage in labor costs.
Unemployment has pushed down the piece rates that factories pay for each
garment sewn or toy assembled. Overtime has practically disappeared.
Lao Shu-jen, a migrant worker from Jiangxi province who works at a blue
jeans factory here, said that he earned $350 a month late last year but would
be lucky to earn $220 a month this spring.
“There are a lot of blue jeans” piling up in the back of the factory
with no sign of buyers, he said.
Highly qualified middle managers, in acutely short supply a year ago, are
now widely available because of layoffs. They are likely to stay that way —
although white-collar unemployment could pose a threat of social unrest.
Limited job opportunities contributed to the Tiananmen Square protests 20
years ago.
Some jobs are still available now. Four days after a shoe factory closed
here for lack of orders, laying off several hundred workers, there were four
ads on the factory’s front gate from other shoe factories seeking to hire
skilled workers.
Unskilled laborers face the greatest difficulty finding jobs. But with
subsidies from Beijing, provincial governments have embarked on large-scale
vocational training programs of the sort that the United States has discussed
but not actually tried.
Guangdong province alone, here in southeastern China, is quadrupling its
vocational training program this year to teach four million workers engaged in
three-month or six-month programs.
The main comparable program in the United States, under the Workforce
Investment Act, has been training fewer than 250,000 a year, although
President Obama’s stimulus program provides funding that could double the
number of American workers in training programs.
The Guangdong training programs are half in the classroom and half in the
factory, usually the business that plans to employ the trainees. By increasing
productivity, training programs can hold down corporate labor costs per unit
of production for years to come.
China’s huge training programs may also help preserve social stability by
keeping the unemployed off the streets, although Chinese officials deny that
is their intention.
Multinationals are cutting back less in China than elsewhere — and some
are even expanding.
Intel is shutting down semiconductor production lines sooner than
previously planned at older, smaller operations in Malaysia and the
Philippines as it opens a large, new factory in Chengdu in western China.
IMI Plc., the big British manufacturer of items as diverse as power plant
valves and brewery equipment, has just announced an accelerated shift of
operations to China, India and the Czech Republic, after cutting its global
work force by 10 percent since December.
And Hon Hai, the 600,000-employee Taiwanese company that is one of the
world’s largest contract manufacturers of products like the Apple iPhone and
Nintendo Wii game console, has just increased employment by nearly 5 percent
in China even as it cuts overall employment by 3 to 5 percent.
Yet China’s economy still has weaknesses. Little is being done to shift
the economy away from a heavy reliance on capital spending and toward greater
consumption. The social safety net of pensions, health care and education
barely exists, so Chinese families save heavily.
Strict government policies on labor and the environment, intended to
address serious shortfalls in both and imposed a year ago when China felt more
confident of its economic strength, are prompting low-tech industries like toy
manufacturing to move to other, less stringent countries.
Top labor officials insisted during the National People’s Congress that
they would resist suggestions from some Chinese executives that the new
standards be relaxed.
Group of 20 Summit London - April 2009
What role will China play in G-20 summit?
2009-03-20 www.chinaview.cn
BEIJING, March 20 (Xinhua) -- As a major emerging market,
what role will China play in trying to salvage the global economy during the
upcoming Group of 20 (G20) summit?
Zhao
Xijun, finance professor at the Renmin University of China, suggested that
emerging economies including China, India, Brazil and Russia might take a
different stand from developed economies.
To
a larger extent, polar positions are forming across the world when it comes to
collaborating on problem solving, said Zhao. Those positions reflect
changes in global economic power.
The
G20 summit, scheduled for April 1-2 in Britain, will be the second time since
last November's G20 summit in Washington that leaders from the developing and
developed world sit at the same table to find a solution for struggling economy.
EMERGING
INFLUENCE
"As
one of the most important countries in G20, China should play an active role in
the London summit," said Du Dawei, director of the China Bureau of the
World Bank.
Concerted
efforts in the global fight against the crisis, especially the huge stimulus
plans launched by China and the United States, are a decisive factor in
facilitating a reversal of the economic downturn, Du said.
Though
the World Bank has tuned down its forecast of China's economic growth to 6.5
percent in 2009, the figure remains outstanding compared to other countries.
China's
economy received less damage than other major economies from the crisis, Du said.
With two trillion U.S. dollars worth of foreign exchange reserves in hand, China
is under the spotlight of the international community, which has high
expectations regarding how much contribution China could make towards helping
the world weather the current situation.
"Amid
the financial crisis, almost every economic stimulus plan launched by China is
in the global spotlight. Only the United States could rival it in the extent of
attention received, which exemplifies China's place in the fight against the
global problem," said Yuan Gangming, a researcher with the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences, a government think tank.
Though
severely damaged by the financial storm, the condition of the global real
economy is somewhat better-off compared with the depression era of the 1930s.
The key reason is that emerging economies contributed greatly to boost
sustainable global growth, said Yuan.
China
managed to grow by 9 percent and India by about 6 percent last year.
DEMAND
FOR MORE RIGHTS
At
the London Summit, China will continue to demand more rights for developing
countries, such as more voting rights, predicted Gong Li, director of the
International Strategic Research Institute of the Party School of the Communist
Party of China Central Committee.
Weeks
ahead of the summit, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao called for reforming the
internal governance structure of the IMF to fend off financing and investment
risks, balance rights and obligations and pay more attention to the interests of
developing countries.
On
Saturday, finance ministers from Brazil, Russia, India and China called for
greater voting rights for developing countries within international financial
organizations on the sidelines of a meeting of G20 finance ministers and central
bankers.
Proposals
include setting up a global early warning system for the financial sector,
building effective responding and rescuing mechanisms, and most importantly,
greater representation for emerging and developing countries within the IMF and
the World Bank.
China
will also call for stricter financial supervision and protest any form of trade
protectionism, said Gong.
IMMEDIATE
RESULTS?
Though
much was entrusted to the G20 summit, such as the reform of the international
monetary and financial systems, experts had doubts of whether the meeting would
be effective.
Zhang
Yansheng, director of the foreign economic research institution with the
National Development and Reform Commission, noted that to solve the deeper
systematic and institutional cause of the problem, real concerted efforts of the
international society are needed. But the divergence of the United States and
Europe on the building of an international financial system would make
substantial reform impossible.
"The
London Summit may not lead to productive results to deal with the crisis,"
said Yin Jianfeng, deputy director of the Institute of Finance and Banking of
the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
"It
is unrealistic to expect immediate change in the international monetary and
financial system which is dominated by the U.S. dollar," he said.
Even
if China boosts its contribution to the IMF, it could not change the dominant
power the United States wields in the organization, said Yin.
According
to IMF rule, the United States, with about 17 percent of the voting rights, has
veto power over important decisions. As voting rights are decided by the amount
of contributions, it would be difficult to increase the voting rights of
emerging economies, he said.
CHANCE
FOR CHINA
But
China should still take the chance and increase its contributions to the
organization to boost China's influence on world financial issues, said experts.
Despite
emerging disputes and divergences, the London Summit would be a step towards
solving the problem, said Gong Li.
The
G20 summit should continue as it is the most important place to discuss how to
lead the world economy out of the current swamp, said experts.
The
G20 summit is playing an increasingly powerful role in integrating efforts to
fight against the global crisis, which has surpassed many negotiation systems
such as the G8 summit, and achieved a broader representation of global economies,
Zhao Xijun said.
"Through
the G20 summit, China has started to take part in international fiscal and
financial decision making, a crucial step made on the international stage,"
said Yuan Gangming.