NPC, CPPCC Annual
Sessions 2009
Premier Wen Jiabao meets
press
 |
|
Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao answers
questions during a press conference after the closing meeting of the
Second Session of the 11th National People's Congress (NPC) at the Great
Hall of the People in Beijing, capital of China, March 13, 2009. The
annual NPC session closed on Friday. (Xinhua Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, March 13 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao said here Friday that China's vigorous central government investment
included in the stimulus package plan is new.
Wen made the remarks in response to
comments that China's 4- trillion-yuan (585 billion U.S. dollars) two-year stimulus
package, which was announced in November, did not include new government
spending.
"People haven't understood China's package," Wen
said.
The 1.18 trillion yuan in the package, which will be funded
by the central government, is "completely new," Wen said, adding that 595
billion yuan have already been allocated to that end in the budget.
The stimulus package plan in a whole include four
major components, including large-scale government spending, industrial
restructuring and rejuvenation, scientific research and social safety net.
Wen said the 1.18 trillion yuan will be used in
projects for public welfare, technological innovation, environmental protection
and infrastructure projects.
Other projects, including the 600 billion-yuan tax
cut, old-age pension increase for enterprise retirees, salary increase to 12
million teachers, subsidies to farmers as well as an 850 billion-yuan three-year
investment in health care reform were not included in the 4 trillion-yuan
stimulus package, he said.
All investment plans in the massive stimulus package
have been fully debated, and would be open for public supervision, he said.
He said the stimulus package included many new
projects, such as the housing projects for low-income urban residents.
"We will provide housing to 7.5 million low-income
families in three years, and provide better shelter for 2.4 million who still
live in shantytowns," the premier said.
Meanwhile, he admitted that some projects in the
stimulus package, such as roads and railways, were included in the country's
11th five-year development plan.
The premier also said that China has prepared
plans to cope with even bigger difficulties amid the financial crisis and is ready to
put forward new stimulus package at any time.
"We have prepared contingency plans to handle greater
difficulties. We have prepared enough 'ammunition' and we can launch new
economic stimulus policies at any time," he said.
