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BEIJING, March 5 (Xinhuanet) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said here Friday that his government wants a seven percent economic growth for 2004, expecting to keep the economic speed train running stable while preventing the wheels from becoming too hot.
The target is set for a "stable and rapid economic
growth without drastic fluctuations", Wen said in his report on the work of the
government delivered at the opening of the Second Session of the 10th National
People's Congress, the top legislature.
China registered a stunning economic growth of 9.1
percent in 2003.
In his report, Wen pledged that the government will
adhere to the policy of expanding domestic demand and continue to implement a
proactive fiscal policy and a prudent monetary policy this year.
The premier did not give an explicit assessment on
whether the Chinese economy is on the brink of an overheating state or not, but
he listed economic foes such as "excessively broad scale of investment, the
serious problem of haphazard investment and low-level, redundant construction in
some industries and regions".
The government plans to cut this year's construction
treasury bond issuance by 30 billion yuan to 110 billion yuan, Wen said.
China began issuing such bonds in 1998 in a bid to
expand investment to stimulate the then slowing economic growth.
The issuance of construction treasury bonds is an
interim policy adopted during a period of insufficient demand and their scale
should be reduced gradually as the increase in nongovernmental investment
accelerates, Wen said.
Meanwhile, the government should make full use of the
role of monetary policy, appropriately control the size of credit and optimize
the credit structure to support economic growth while fending off inflation and
financial risks, he said.
The consumer price index (CPI), a barometer measuring
inflation,rose 1.2 percent in China last year. The prevailing view of domestic
economists points to a further CPI increase in 2004. Enditem |