Special Report: 30 Years of Reform & Opening Up
BEIJING, Jan. 14 (Xinhua) -- China revised the growth
rate of its gross domestic product (GDP) for 2007 to 13.0 percent from 11.9
percent, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Wednesday.
The pace was the fastest since 1994 when the GDP
expanded by 13.1 percent, according to the NBS data.
Final verification showed the GDP totaled 25.7306
trillion yuan (3.76 trillion U.S. dollars), an increase of 777.6 billion yuan
over the initial verification data, which was released in April 2008.
The figure for the agriculture sector was 2.8627
trillion yuan, 53.2 billion yuan larger than previous verification.
The data for the industry and service sectors were
12.4799 and 10.388 trillion yuan respectively or 341.8 and 382.6 billion yuan
larger than previous figures.
The bureau reformed its GDP reporting mechanism in
2003. It is now divided into three steps: initial calculation, initial
verification and final verification.
China's annual GDP growth rate for 2007 was 11.4
percent after the initial calculation in January 2008. In April it was revised
up to 11.9 percent after the initial verification.
The final figure is often larger because it takes
time to collect complete economic data from millions of small private and
service businesses, said an expert, who declined to be named.
China is expected to record single-digit economic
growth in 2008, the first time in six years, as the recession in the U.S.,
Europe and Japan reduce demands for goods. For example, Deutsche Bank economists
forecast China's 2008 economic growth to be 9 percent.
China's GDP expanded 9 percent in the third quarter
last year, down from 10.1 percent in the second quarter and 10.6 percent in the
first quarter, according to the NBS.
