Chinese premier says economic woes to continue
Christopher Bodeen, Associated Press, Beijing | Business | Sun, July 15 2012, 7:37 PM
China's economic woes that have brought growth to a three-year low will
continue for some time, but the slower expansion remains within expectations,
Premier Wen Jiabao said Sunday.
Speaking during
a tour of the southwestern city of Chengdu,
Wen said Chinese need to recognize the seriousness and complexity of the
challenges the country faces. But he added that China's economic fundamentals
remain favorable.
"At
present, our country's economic growth rate remains within the target range set
earlier this year and we are seeing the effectiveness of stabilization
policies," Wen said in remarks posted on the central government's official
website.
The government
will prioritize job creation and provide financial aid and tax breaks to
companies suffering from slowing exports due to sinking overseas demand, Wen
said. Private investment will be encouraged and the government will promote
industrial upgrading and urbanization to spur consumption, he said.
"All
regions and departments need to proceed with even greater determination and
courage," Wen said.
His comments
follow the government's announcement Friday that the world's second-largest
economy grew by 7.6 percent in the three months ending in June over a year
earlier. That was the lowest since the first quarter of 2009 during the depths
of the global financial crisis.
Growth was down
from the previous quarter's 8.1 percent, damping hopes that China can make
up for US and European weakness, but in line with the government's official
target of 7.5 percent for the year
Private-sector
forecasters say the economy may have bottomed out during the first two quarters
and China
still is likely to achieve its target for the year.
Export growth
has fallen and consumer spending weakened despite stimulus measures including
two interest rate cuts since the start of June. The government also is pumping
money into the economy through higher investment by state-owned industry and
more spending on low-cost housing and other public works.
However, Beijing is moving
cautiously after its 2008 stimulus pushed up inflation and spurred a wasteful
building boom. Authorities have said curbs imposed on building and home sales
to cool surging housing prices will remain in place. (nvn)