China will be able to achieve about 8 percent growth: Premier

By Xinhua,

Beijing : China would be able to achieve the economic growth target of about eight percent in 2009 if proper policies and measures are taken, Premier Wen Jiabao has said.


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“As long as we adopt the right policies and appropriate measures and implement them effectively, we will be able to achieve this target,” Wen told the Second Session of the 11th National People’s Congress (NPC).

It is the fifth year in a row for the country to target an eight percent growth.

“In China, a developing country with a population of 1.3 billion, maintaining a certain growth rate for the economy is essential for expanding employment for both urban and rural residents, increasing people’s incomes and ensuring social stability,” said Wen.

Wen said the eight percent target was proposed based on China’s need and ability.

“We are fully confident that we will overcome difficulties and challenges, and we have the conditions and ability to do so,” the premier told nearly 3,000 lawmakers at the Great Hall of the People in downtown Beijing.

China’s economy cooled to a seven-year low of nine percent growth last year, and broke a five-year streak of double-digit expansion, as the global financial crisis started to take its toll on the world’s fastest growing economy.

China is under great pressure to actualise the targeted eight percent growth, which is essential for the populous developing nation, although the country outperformed the target in the previous four years.

The premier acknowledged the country is facing “unprecedented difficulties and challenges”.

“The global financial crisis continues to spread and get worse,” he said.

Wen said 2009 could be “the most difficult year for China’s economic development since the beginning of the 21st century”.

Some analysts have put their forecasts of 2009 China growth below eight percent. The lowest projection is five percent.

The Chinese economy slowed to 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter, the worst slowing in nine years, as the global downturn sapped demand for Chinese exports, which comprise about 40 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).

In a bid to achieve the growth target, Wen said the country would implement a proactive fiscal policy and a moderately easy monetary policy. The government will increase its spending and expects banks to issue five trillion yuan ($731 billion) in new loans.

The government would also actively boost domestic demand, continue to proceed with the economic restructuring and independent innovation and accelerate the transformation of the development pattern, strengthen the position of agriculture as the foundation of the economy, and make arduous efforts to promote export, according to the premier.

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