Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Update: China's Xi says 6.5% annual growth enough to meet goals: Xinhua

Update: China's Xi says 6.5% annual growth enough to meet goals: Xinhua

[BEIJING] Growth of only 6.5 per cent a year in 2016-2020 will be enough for China to meet its wealth goals, President Xi Jinping said on Tuesday according to the official news agency Xinhua.
The report came as the ruling Communist party issued guidelines for the next five-year plan for the world's second-largest economy, whose slowing growth has alarmed investors worldwide.
The first documents released by the leadership conclave did not include a numerical growth target.
But Xinhua cited Xi as saying that annual growth should be no less than 6.5 per cent in the next five years to achieve the Communist Party's aim of doubling GDP per capita from 2010 by the end of the decade.
It said he made the remarks in a speech, without giving direct quotes.
The doubling target is part of achieving what China's ruling party calls a "moderately prosperous society" in time for the 100th anniversary of its foundation.
The comments are the clearest indication yet that Beijing will reduce its target growth rate from the current "around 7 per cent", after expansion slowed last quarter to its lowest in six years.
Some economists say that the current figure is unattainable going forwards, and that trying to do so risks derailing painful but necessary markets reforms.
The country has faced economic turbulence in recent months as it attempts to transition its economy from years of super-charged growth to a more modest pace it has dubbed the "new normal".
Botched stock market interventions and a sudden currency devaluation have rattled confidence in the country's leadership, which has staked its legitimacy on maintaining an aura of economic infallibility.
AFP

No comments:

Post a Comment