BEIJING, Sept. 22 (Xinhua) -- The Asian Development
Bank said Tuesday it had revised its forecast on China's year-on-year economic
growth to 8.2 percent for 2009.
The new projection for this year is higher than the
bank's previous forecast of 7 percent on March 31 and above the goal of 8percent
set by the central government.
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Graphics shows the forecast of China's year-on-year economic growth in 2009 revised up to 8.2 percent by the Asian Development Bank on Sept. 21, 2009. (Xinhua/Zheng Yue) Photo Gallery>>> |
The lift in the GDP growth forecast was because of "a
surge in bank lending and vigorous fixed-assets investment".
The government rolled out a 4-trillion-yuan (585
billion U.S. dollars) stimulus package in November last year, aiming to boost
economic growth slowed by a slump in exports amid the global economic downturn.
It also implemented a moderately relaxed, proactive policy to help revive the
economy.
"The policy has softened the blow from the global
slump," the bank said.
China's economic expansion will surge to 8.9 percent
in 2010, the ADB said, contributing the lift to the maintenance of the fiscal
stimulus and a likely moderate recovery in the global economy in 2010.
The bank estimated China's consumer price index (CPI)
would fall 0.5 percent from a year earlier this year and rise 3.0 percent in
2010.
"Such a scenario might trigger a round of severe
monetary belt-tightening in the medium term," the ADB warned, "if the monetary
stimulus were to be withdrawn too quickly, there would be a risk of slowing down
in growth".
"Authorities face the challenge of balancing the need
to maintain aggressive monetary stimulus until growth is sustainable against the
risk the flood of bank lending will be diverted into speculation and excess
industry capacity," the bank said.
"The predicted 3-percent inflation rate in 2010 is
mild and would not trigger big problems, which mean that China will not
necessarily need to tighten its monetary and fiscal policy prematurely, gearing
down economic growth, said Zhuang Jian, a senior economist with the ADB.
According to the bank, the Chinese economy is
currently facing risks brought by the possible fragile overseas demand resulted
from the uncertainty in the recovery of the global economy, the unsure future of
the government's expansive fiscal policy, possible asset bubbles and
non-performing loans caused by the slack monetary policy.
China should work harder in economic reconstructing,
and in the promotion of domestic demand and employment, the bank said
The Manila-based multilateral bank updated its
forecast of average growth in developing Asian economies to 3.9 percent in 2009
from a previous estimate of 3.4 percent made in March.
It also raised its 2010 forecast to 6.4 percent from
6.0 percent.
Firm actions by many governments and central banks,
relatively healthy financial systems and a rapid turnaround in less
export-dependent economies have pushed forward the region's recovery from the
financial crisis, according to the bank.
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