Special report: 2008 Olympic Games
BEIJING, Aug. 3 (Xinhua) -- Beijing's gross domestic
product (GDP) is expected to break the 1-trillion-yuan mark (146.2 billion U.S.
dollars) this year thanks to its hosting of the Olympic Games, a city official
said on Sunday.
The Games had given impetus and vigor to Beijing's
economy and helped the city achieve sound and fast economic development, said
Wang Haiping, deputy director of the Municipal Development and Reform Commission
(BMDRC).
In 2007, the city's GDP grew 12.3 percent over a year
earlier to stand at 900 billion yuan, twice that of 2001 when it won the bid to
host the Games, Wang said. Over the past six years, Beijing's annual GDP growth
was 12.4 percent on average.
Figures from the Beijing Statistics Bureau (BSB)
showed the city's GDP reached 497.3 billion yuan in the first half, up 11
percent from the same period last year.
Wang said GDP per capita had risen from 3,262 U.S.
dollars in 2001 to 7,654 dollars last year, and would surpass 8,000 dollars this
year.
Hosting the Olympic Games had boosted the city's
economy with infrastructure investment, a better environment, increased
consumption and improved living standards, he said.
According to the BSB, Beijing's annual GDP growth
from 2005 to 2008, which saw huge investments for the Olympics, would reach 11.8
percent on average, 0.8 percentage point higher than the 2001-2005 period.
In 2007, the Olympic factor contributed 1.14 percent
to the growth rate, according to BSB estimates.
The bureau forecast the Olympic factor, which
referred to the impetus generated by investment in infrastructure and sports
facilities, would add 0.85 percent to Beijing's GDP growth this year.
As a whole, economic activities related to the Games
would have generated a combined GDP of 105.5 billion yuan for Beijing during
2004-2008, according to the BSB.
The municipal government reported on Friday that it
had spent less than 13 billion yuan on the construction of 31 competition
venues, 45 training venues and other Games facilities.
On Saturday, BMDRC deputy director Lu Yingchuan said
economists were generally agreed that the economy of Beijing would experience no
big fluctuations or slump after the Olympics.