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BEIJING, Dec. 13 (Xinhuanet) -- A senior World Bank
trade official said here Monday that China is the major contributing factor to
accelerated global economic growth, which is projected to grow by 4 percent this
year, and the record high growth rate of developing economies as a group.
Uri Dadush, director of the bank's International
Trade Department and Development Prospects Group, predicted that the growth rate
of developing economies for this year will be higher than the average annual
growth rates for both the 1980s and 1990s.
The rapid hike in the economic growth in the Untied
States and Japan are also important contributing factors, he said.
The strong demand from China's rapid economic
development and continuous domestic demand in the United States led to
unexpected growth rate of 10.2 percent in the world trade, said the director.
According to an outlook report on global economy and
developingcountries, China is projected to achieve an economic growth rate of
9.25 percent this year, while Russia's economic growth rate will be 8 percent,
and India's 6 percent.
Growth in those big economies have helped developing
countries achieve a projected 6.1 percent growth rate, a record high in the past
three decades, according to the report.
The report owes China's good economic performance to
the country's loose credit policies and the benefits China gained fromits entry
into the World Trade Organization.
China's rapid import growth, which is expected to
exceed 30 percent this year, provides strong support to its neighboring
EastAsian economies, it argued.
The bank said in the report that China's economy will
slow downto about 8 percent in 2005, and 7.1 percent in 2006 due to slower world
economy and higher prices of oil and other primary commodities.
The economies of the Untied States and Japan will
also slow down next year, and the world economy will grow by 3.2 percent
annually in the coming two years, according to the report. Enditem
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