China is likely to declare itself the world's fourth
largest economy next week, having leapfrogged Italy, France and Britain, after a
widely expected revision of its annual gross domestic product figures.
Economists say the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), which is due to
release part of the results of its first national economic census on December 20, is
likely to put a much bigger figure on the size of China's services sector.
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao is reportedly telling the East Asia Summit
Leaders Dialogue in Kuala Lumpur on Monday that China gross domestic
product (GDP) reached US$2 trillion in 2004 following an average economic
growth rate of a 9.4 per cent rise over the past 27 years, since
1978.
Chinese Government hopes to double that figure to US$4 trillion and
raise its per-capita GDP to at
least US$3,000 by 2020, said Wen.
The Hong Kong-based The South
China Morning Post, citing unnamed economists, reported Tuesday that the
agency would probably revise GDP by as much as $300 billion, or about 20
percent of 2004 output.
A revision of that magnitude could catapult China from the world's
seventh-largest economy into fourth spot, now occupied by Britain.
Jim O'Neill, chief global economist at Goldman Sachs in London, said
China could attain that status even without such a big revision based on
growth rates and currency changes in 2005.
Not only has China grown far more quickly than Italy, France and
Britain this year, but the yuan has risen about 2.5 percent against the
dollar, further boosting its output when measured in dollars. The euro and
sterling, by contrast, have fallen.
"China could squeak in ahead of Britain even without a revision,"
O'Neill said. "It just goes to show how much it's contributing to the
world economy."
Economists said an upward revision of 20 percent, as reported by the
South China Morning Post, would be in line with their own estimates -- or
could even be too modest.
Chen Xingdong, chief China economist for BNP Paribas Peregrine in
Beijing, said he would not be surprised if the NBS revised up its estimate
of China's GDP, which totalled $1.65 trillion in 2004, by 15 percent to 20
percent.
China's number-crunchers have failed to capture the boom in small and
medium-sized industrial enterprises, Chen said.
"We always argue that it has been largely underestimated for a long,
long time," he said. "Even a number like 15 percent is not that large for
us."
Dong Tao, chief economist for non-Japan Asia at Credit Suisse First
Boston (Hong Kong) Ltd., said China's GDP would still be understated even
if it was revised up by $300 billion.
"There's a massive under-reporting of GDP in the service sector," Tao
said.
He cited the relatively low quality of data collection in China as one
reason for that. Economists have long pointed to shortcomings in China's
statistics, due to a central planning legacy that put priority on
collecting data on the production of physical goods from state-owned
enterprises.
Tao said another reason was that many service enterprises fall through
the statisticians' net because they fail to report income for tax reasons.
France came fifth in the World Bank's rankings, with 2004 GDP of $2.00
trillion, and Italy sixth, with output of $1.67 trillion. The United
States, followed by Japan and Germany, topped the list.
(Xinhua) |