The Chinese economy is maintaining red-hot growth, but now top policymakers
are considering how to build a greener economy.
"China should take
substantive measures to shift its focus from pursuing speed to improving the
quality and efficiency of economic growth," President Hu Jintao said at last
week.
The Chinese economy has grown rapidly this year.
In October,
China witnessed not only a record trade surplus but also the fastest growth of
retail sales in almost two years.
Official statistics
showed that the country's trade surplus reached a record US$23.8 billion in
October, bringing the total for the year to US$133 billion, a third higher than
for all of 2005. Meanwhile, retail sales jumped 14.3 per cent year-on-year to 699.8 billion yuan (US$89.1
billion).
Along with the acceleration of net export growth and the
pick-up of consumption, the country's investment has slowed down as a desired
result of the country's macroeconomic control.
Urban fixed-asset
investment growth was lowered to 26.8 per cent year-on-year in the first 10
months, down from 31.3 per cent for the first half of this year.
The
growth of gross domestic product(GDP) has slowed from a stunning 11.3 per-cent in the second
quarter to 10.4 per cent in the third quarter.
The People's Bank of China, the nation's central bank, predicted last month
that the economy will likely expand at a more than 10 per cent pace in
2006.
However, amid such encouraging economic indicators, Chinese
policymakers are paying more attention to energy and environment, areas that
allow for little optimism.
The government has made a 4 per cent cut in
the country's overall energy intensity a binding goal for this year. It is the
first step to achieving one of the key goals of the new 11th Five Year (2006-10)
Plan to lower consumption of energy per unit of GDP by 20 per cent in five
years.
But in the first half of this year, the country's energy
consumption per unit of GDP rose by 0.8 per cent in the first half
year.
"The underlying reason is that we have strong growth momentum, but
we lack pressure and economic incentives to realize the change of growth
pattern," wrote Chen Qingtai, former deputy director of the Development Research
Centre under the State Council.
Figures released last week by the State
Development and Reform Commission showed that the country's coal output and
electricity generation in the first 10 months increased by 12.2 per cent and 13
per cent over the same period last year.
Given that the GDP growth was
less than 11 per cent for the first three quarters, the country's energy
intensity can at best level out this year.
The country has stepped up its
efforts to improve energy efficiency this year.
The central government
has designated specific energy saving goals for each province to fulfil. By
doing so, performance of local officials will eventually be evaluated in line
with their efforts to raise energy efficiency.
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