Chinese leaders who say its booming economy is growing too fast want to cut 
spending on energy-guzzling factories and other wasteful projects, rather than 
slow its overall expansion, economists said Monday. 
President Hu Jintao announced Sunday that the economy grew 10.2 percent in 
the first quarter _ more than 2 percentage points above the official target _ 
and said Beijing doesn't want "excessively fast growth." That came after the 
Cabinet on Friday called for new curbs on bank lending. 
But analysts said that instead of higher interest rates or other measures to 
slow growth, they expect to see targeted efforts to force banks to screen 
borrowers and to enforce energy efficiency. 
"The government has to walk a tightrope, restraining the excessive investment 
while not undermining overall dynamic growth," said Stephen Green, senior 
economist for Standard Chartered Bank in Shanghai. 
Chinese leaders have warned repeatedly that rapid growth could ignite 
inflation or leave the country littered with unneeded factories and luxury 
apartments, causing problems for banks that financed them. 
The government target for this year is 8 percent growth, though forecasts by 
outsiders range as high as 9.5 percent. The economy expanded by 9.9 percent last 
year. 
Amid their warnings, Chinese leaders need to keep the economy surging to 
replace millions of jobs lost in layoffs at state industry. And the government 
needs the tax revenues to pay for ambitious plans to develop the poor 
countryside. 
In comments Sunday to a visiting Taiwanese opposition leader, Hu stressed 
official concern about the "quality and effect of our growth" and about 
conserving resources. 
"They're trying to create a sense of concern so that when the government goes 
out to banks and local governments and says, 'Here's what you need to do,' there 
will be some pressure," said Andy Rothman, China macro strategist for CLSA 
Asia-Pacific Markets. 
The latest announcements come at a time when China is awash in a flood of 
cash from booming exports and foreign investment. 
China has piled up the world's biggest foreign reserves, which the central 
bank says have reached US$875.1 billion (euro723 billion). Most is invested in 
U.S. Treasury bonds. 
On Monday, a state newspaper quoted a deputy chairman of China's parliament, 
Cheng Siwei, as saying the government should reduce the amount of Treasuries it 
buys. He said China should channel the money into buying more U.S. goods, which 
would cut its politically sensitive trade surplus, the China Securities Journal 
reported.