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China’s Economy Shows Positive
Signs, Su Ning Says...
By Bloomberg
News
June 23
(Bloomberg) -- People’s Bank of China Vice Governor Su Ning said the world’s third-biggest economy is
showing positive signs and the government is staying confident.
“We will have
firm confidence and fight through the difficulties,” Su said at a financial
conference in Beijing today. While the overall situation is stabilizing, the
economy’s fundamentals are still not solid, Su said.
Chinese
officials are striking a tone of cautious optimism as lending and investment surge and manufacturing expands,
helping to drive a recovery against the backdrop of a global recession. The economy is in a “critical” phase as the
government’s 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus plan counters a collapse
in trade, according to a June 21 statement by Premier Wen Jiabao.
“The economy is
in better shape than the officials are indicating,” said Glenn Maguire, chief Asia-Pacific economist at
Societe Generale SA in Hong Kong. “They’ve already bedded down the recovery,”
he said, citing a flood of money into the financial system, investment gains
and increases in the official manufacturing index.
The Shanghai Composite Index fell 1.4 percent as of
11:30 a.m. local time after oil and copper declined, stoking concern that a
global recovery will falter..
Exports,
Unemployment
“Pushed by a
series of policies, our economic conditions have shown some positive changes,”
Su said.
The economy may
grow almost 8 percent in the three months ending June 30 from a year earlier,
up from 6.1 percent in the first quarter, statistics bureau economist Guo
Tongxin estimated on the agency’s Web site today. Gross domestic product may
climb more than 2 percent quarter-on-quarter, Guo said. The economist’s report
was a personal view, the bureau said.
After bottoming
out in the fourth quarter, the economy still faces falling exports, increasing company losses and industrial
overcapacity, Guo said.
TCL Corp., the nation’s biggest maker of consumer
electronics, posted a 97 percent plunge in first-quarter profit as exports of
televisions and mobile phones fell.
Officials won’t
play up the economy’s strength for fear of encouraging trading partners to push
for more appreciation of the yuan, Maguire said. The central bank halted the
currency’s gains against the dollar in July last year, helping exporters after
the 21 percent increase since the end of a fixed exchange rate in 2005.
World Bank
Forecast
China’s
government may also be waiting for signs of a “firmer recovery” in western
nations’ consumption, the economist said.
The World Bank
raised last week its 2009 growth forecast for China and advised policy makers
to delay until 2010 any additional stimulus plan. The economy will expand 7.2 percent
from a year earlier, up from a 6.5 percent forecast in March, the
Washington-based lender said.
In contrast
with China’s prospects, the World Bank cut yesterday its forecast for the world
economy, predicting a 2.9 percent contraction this year.
The surge in new loans, triggered by the central bank
scrapping lending quotas and cutting interest rates in the final four months of
last year, has continued this month, according to a report in the Shanghai
Securities News yesterday.
Banks are set
to lend more in June than in May, the newspaper said, citing unidentified
sources. Last month, new loans more than doubled from a year earlier.
--Zhao Yidi, Paul Panckhurst, Irene Shen, John Liu.
Editors: Paul Panckhurst, Victoria Batchelor.
To contact the
Bloomberg News staff for this story: Yidi Zhao in Beijing at
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Last
Updated: June 23, 2009 00:57 EDT |
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