CHINA> Figures
China's FDI falls 17.9 pct in H1
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-07-15 10:51

BEIJING: Foreign direct investment in China fell in June for the ninth straight month, but the decline narrowed, adding to signs of an economic recovery, the Commerce Ministry said Wednesday.

Actual foreign direct investment in June totaled $9 billion, down 6.8 percent from a year earlier, while the number of new approved foreign companies totaled 2,529, down 3.8 percent, ministry spokesman Yao Jian told a news conference.

The FDI drop compared to a 17.8 percent fall in May, likely another sign of improvement in China's economy.

Yao said the scale of investment withdrawal and reductions by foreign companies has increased in the last nine months, battered by the global financial crisis.

"It indicates that we are still facing very big difficulties attracting foreign investment," Yao said.

In the half year ended June 30, actual foreign direct investment in China declined by 17.9 percent, totaling $43 billion, compared with the same period last year.

China is due to release a slew of economic data, including GDP growth for the first half of the year, on Thursday. Expectations of a revival in the economy have pushed the stock market up to a 13-month high.

Foreign direct investment last year rose 23.6 percent $92.4 billion in 2008 from the previous year, though growth began to weaken toward the end of the year.