BEIJING, July 30 -- Experts predict China will likely
surpass Japan in the coming decade to become the world's second largest economy.
A host of China's influential mainstream economists
painted the rosy picture during the weekend at Tianheng Island in East China's
Shandong Province.
Experts said the economic outlook was conditional on
whether the country could swiftly adjust itself to ever-evolving domestic and
global circumstances.
The members of Beijing-based China Economist 50 Forum
gathered to debate the country's "big development topics of strategic
importance" in the coming 10 years, ahead of the 17th Congress of the Communist
Party of China, scheduled for autumn.
Some experts said they believed that China faced
obstacles, including environmental problems and resource constraints, rising
labor costs, imbalanced foreign trade, economic restructuring and an incomplete
social security network.
Even "moral degradation" has been taken as "daunting
challenge."
Despite the challenges, one prediction is that China
is on the way to becoming a world-class economic power only after the United
States by about 2018.
At that time, China's per capita GDP (gross domestic product) is expected to
surge from the current 1,870 U.S. dollars to about 6,000 U.S. dollar, a
benchmark between middle- and upper-developed countries.
"The benchmark is of great significance," said Xu
Shanda, an economist chairing the discussion among the members of the think-tank
organization.
The organization also predicated that China's growth
pace would gradually slow down from the current blistering 11.5 percent to 8-9
percent by 2018.
If growth is sustained, China will outpace Japan as
the world's second biggest economy.
Despite the fast growth, the economists reached the
consensus that China should step up its efforts to continue its "balanced
approaches" to tackle "unprecedented challenges" while becoming globalized.
"I personally believe that the process should be one
that moral standards should be redefined and elevated," Fan Hengshan, director
of regional development department under National Development and Reform
Commission, said.
Yi Gang, assistant governor of People's Bank of
China, proposed that China should continue its "put-people-first" approach to
tackling long-term challenges. "On one hand, we should create a sound
environment for the rich, both at home and from other economies," Yi said.
(Source: China Daily)