US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Still praiseworthy performance

By Chen Jinbao (China Daily) Updated: 2013-01-24 07:22

While obtaining admirable economic growth, progress has also been made in improving people's livelihoods. According to the National Bureau of Statistics, the per capita disposable income of urban residents grew 9.6 percent in 2012, and the net income of rural residents grew by 10.7 percent, both higher than the country's economic growth. The increased incomes of urban and rural residents, together with increased government subsidies for the pension and healthcare networks, lay a solid foundation for the country's goal of doubling residents' incomes by 2020 from the 2010 level.

China's slower economic growth is a result of its efforts to stabilize growth and adjust its economic structure. The rising proportion of services in the country's GDP, which was 45 percent in 2012, 1.2 percentage points higher than 2011, is an indication of China's tangible steps toward economic restructuring.

China has also stepped up structural tax reductions, including extending the trial of turning business tax into value-added tax, raising the threshold for business tax and VAT, and pushing for implementation of previously adopted policies and measures aimed at supporting small-sized enterprises. Data from the Ministry of Finance indicate that China's fiscal revenues grew 11.2 percent in 2012, far slower than the 22.6 percent growth in 2011 and 23 percent in 2010, but an 8 percent reduction in the personal income tax on wage earners and a 12.5 percent tax reduction on those running private companies have also contributed to the considerable rise in residents' disposal incomes.

In the context of global monetary easing, China has chosen a sound and prudent monetary policy. Following two cuts in banks' benchmark interest rates and their reserve requirement ratio during the first half of 2012, China's central bank turned to continuous reverse repurchasing in the latter half of the year as a way of satisfying growing liquidity demands and responding to market demands for further cuts on interest rates and the reserve requirement ratio.

Despite a newly increased loan of 8.2 trillion yuan ($1.3 trillion)in 2012, an increase of 732 billion yuan on the previous year, the growth rate is much lower than the 30 percent growth in 2009 and 2010. This, together with a much slower currency supply, indicates China's adherence to a relatively sound monetary policy. Tightened credit has effectively prevented the eruption of a systematic financial risk in China, and left enough space for its monetary and credit policies to maneuver in 2013.

China's good economic performance in 2012 is also an indication that a moderate economic deceleration should not cause concern. The considerable increase in GDP and government fiscal revenues in the past has accustomed China to economic growth higher than 8 percent. This prompted China to turn to the old investment-driven economic model once concerns arose about an economic downturn. However, the 7.8 percent economic growth in 2012 did not increase unemployment and slow the rise of people's incomes. It should be taken as a lesson that China should not hesitate to change from the pursuit of an excessively high growth to the pursuit of moderate growth and higher economic quality.

The author is an economics PhD at the Beijing University of Science and Technology and an economics commentator.

(China Daily 01/24/2013 page8)

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

Most Viewed Today's Top News
New type of urbanization is in the details
...