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Wen Seen Paring China’s 8% Growth Target on Rise in Inequality: Economy

China’s Premier Wen Jiabao is seen signaling next month that curbing pollution, inequality and the risk of financial instability eclipse the benefits of faster economic growth, a survey of analysts indicated.
Wen will target an expansion of less than 8 percent in his report to the National People’s Congress in Beijing on March 5, the equivalent of the U.S. President’s State of the Union address, according to 8 of 15 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The median estimate of 7.5 percent compares with the 8 percent goal maintained from 2005 to 2011, even amid the 2008-09 world recession.
A cut may indicate policy makers are prepared to tolerate a slower expansion as they move the economy’s drivers to consumption from exports and investment, a shift that may address global imbalances blamed for the last financial crisis. The survey results tally with state economist Fan Jianping’s prediction last week that a reduced goal will be set to send a message to local officials bent on chasing growth.
“A lower target should be seen more as a signal that there’s more emphasis on economic transformation and quality of growth over speed rather than a real goal,” said Ding Shuang, a Hong Kong-based economist with Citigroup Inc., who previously worked for the International Monetary Fund and China’s central bank. “Slower growth could provide more room to proceed with reforms that are required for rebalancing.”
Stocks Fall
Asian stocks today fell the most in a week and the Australian dollar weakened as reports signaled slowing global growth and Hewlett-Packard Co. forecast profit that missed estimates. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index lost 0.3 percent as of 11:47 a.m. in Tokyo after dropping as much as 0.6 percent, while the Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.3 percent at 10:48 a.m.
Average annual growth of 10 percent in the past three decades turned China into the world’s biggest emitter of carbon dioxide in addition to the second-largest economy and top exporter. The nation overtook the U.S. in 2009 to become the biggest energy consumer, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency, a description China rejected.
As the Communist Party prepares for President Hu Jintao and Wen to hand over to a younger generation of leaders, officials aim to limit discontent over home costs, land seizures and the gap between rich and poor.
Gross domestic product expanded 9.2 percent in 2011 from 10.4 percent the previous year, as the government wound back stimulus measures and cracked down on property speculation. The nation’s five-year plan running through 2015 targets an average 7 percent expansion. Such goals are routinely exceeded and growth reached 14 percent as recently as 2007, according to the statistics bureau.
‘Didn’t Translate’
“For most people in China, the stellar double-digit growth rates of a few years ago didn’t translate into equivalent increases in income or spending,” said Mark Williams, a London- based economist at Capital Economics Ltd. who formerly advised the U.K. Treasury on China. Benefits would flow through “if the balance of the economy shifted towards services, light manufacturing and other areas that create a lot of jobs,” he said.
Elsewhere in the region, Taiwan’s industrial output probably fell a third month in January, with the median of 11 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey predicting a 15.3 percent decline in a report due later today.
Hong Kong’s trade deficit may have narrowed to HK$29.9 billion (US$3.86 billion) in January from HK$48.9 billion in December, according to a Bloomberg News survey of 10 economists. Singapore’s consumer prices probably rose 4.7 percent in January from a year earlier, a survey of 15 economists shows, easing from a 5.5 percent pace the prior month.
U.S. Jobless Claims
U.S. initial jobless claims rose by 7,000 to 355,000 in the week ended Feb. 18, according to a Bloomberg survey of 47 economists, ticking up from a four-year low the previous week. December home prices rose 0.1 percent from the previous month, according to a survey of 18 economists.
In Europe, German business confidence probably rose to the highest in seven months in February as progress in taming Europe’s debt crisis tempered the risk of a recession. The Ifo institute’s business climate index, based on a survey of 7,000 executives, climbed to 108.8 from 108.3 in January, according to the median of 38 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. That would be the fourth straight gain and the highest value since July.
An index of factory orders in the U.K. probably rose to minus 13 in February from minus 16 in January, the Confederation of British Industry will say, according to a Bloomberg survey of 11 economists.
Unstable Model
China’s Premier Wen has described the country’s growth model as unstable, unbalanced, uncoordinated and unsustainable, a phrase echoed by Jin Qi, an assistant governor of the central bank, as recently as last week. In last year’s work report, the premier highlighted resource and environmental constraints, an imbalance between investment and consumption, the wealth gap, and uneven development of urban and rural areas.
Signs of unrest have included December’s two-week blockade of the village of Wukan in Guangdong, linked to residents protesting disputed land sales and the death of a local man in police custody.
A high-speed rail crash last July killed 40 people, prompting the People’s Daily, a Communist Party mouthpiece, to call for economic development that is not “stained with blood.” Pollution incidents this year include a cadmium spill in Guangxi province that threatened the drinking water of millions of people.
Income Distribution
China’s Gini coefficient, an income-distribution gauge used by economists, has climbed to near 0.5 from less than 0.3 a quarter century ago, according to Li Shi, a professor of economics at the School of Economics and Business at Beijing Normal University. The measure ranges from 0 to 1, and the 0.4 mark is used as a predictor by analysts for social unrest.
So-called mass incidents, including strikes, riots and other disturbances, doubled to at least 180,000 in 2010 from 2006, according to Sun Liping, a sociology professor at Beijing’s Tsinghua University.
“What’s sustainable is growth that’s more inclusive, less energy intensive and less polluting,” Murtaza Syed, the IMF’s resident representative in Beijing, said in an interview yesterday. “You can keep growth very high by investing a lot but you create a problem in the medium term that could actually lead to a slowdown that’s very, very severe over the next 10 to 15-year horizon.”
Rural Poor
The government’s efforts to help the worst-off citizens have included raising the rural poverty line so 128 million people are eligible for subsidies, and pledging to build 36 million units of low-cost housing from 2011 to 2015.
Fan, the chief economist at the State Information Center, said this year’s growth target may be 7 or 7.5 percent to “act as guidance for local authorities to not focus on chasing speed.” In other forecasts from the survey of analysts, a majority said the nation’s inflation target will be set at 4 percent, the same as last year.

Wen Seen Paring China
 
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Lamborghini says slowing China economy may cut sales

Lamborghini, maker of the $1-million Aventador LP 700-4, said industry sales of ultra-luxury sports cars may slow as signs that China's economy is weakening puts off some buyers.

"If you look at the economy right now, there may be some uncertainty to make people wait a little," Christian Mastro, Lamborghini's Asia Pacific general manager, said in an interview.

"The number of people able to spend this kind of money is limited, it's not unlimited."

Growth in the world's secondlargest economy cooled to the slowest pace in more than two years in the fourth quarter and the trade ministry described the export outlook as "grim" last week. Lamborghini's sales jumped about 70 per cent in the country last year as rising incomes pushed up the number of Chinese millionaires and stoked demand for luxury goods.

Lamborghini joins BMW's Rolls-Royce in forecasting more muted demand for ultra-luxury cars in China, which has grown to become the largest market for automakers from Audi to General Motors.

Rolls-Royce chief executive officer Torsten Mueller-Oetvoes predicted last month that China's growth will be less "explosive" this year. Total auto sales slowed last year after the end of stimulus measures and the economic expansion showed signs of easing.

Lamborghini aims to boost deliveries in China by 20 per cent to 30 per cent, less than half the pace of last year, as the sports-car maker can't produce enough Aventadors to meet the 18-month waiting list, Mastro said.

Makers of supercars have come to a consensus that the segment will grow about 25 per cent in China to about 2,000 cars this year, versus a doubling in 2011, Mastro said.

Lamborghini plans to spend 20 per cent more on marketing this year and will hold more events such as track drives to spur sales, he said. The Sant'Agata Bolognese, Italybased company will also expand the number of dealers this year by six to 20, opening in smaller cities outside Shanghai and Beijing such as Xian, Nanjing, Changsha and Shenyang, he said.

The typical buyer of a Lamborghini in China is on average 20 years younger than in Europe, according to the company. Chinese customers have to wait at least 18 months before taking delivery of the Aventador, which has a 700-horsepower V-12 engine and can accelerate to 100 kilometres per hour in 2.9 seconds, Mastro said. The company also sells the Gallardo in the country.

Lamborghini plans to make 900 Aventadors globally this year and has sold out all 80 it allocated to China this year, Mastro said. The company has no immediate plan to raise the quota so as to ensure supply for other regions, he said.

The sports-car maker sold a total of 342 units in China last year, overtaking the U.S. as its largest market. The Volkswagen unit more than doubled its deliveries in China to 206 cars in 2010, from 80 in the previous 12-month period.



Read more: Lamborghini says slowing China economy may cut sales

---------- Post added at 03:52 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:49 AM ----------

Shrinking Manufacturing in China May Mean Slower Economic Growth

China’s manufacturing may shrink for a fourth month in February, indicating the world’s second-biggest economy remains vulnerable to a deeper slowdown as Europe’s crisis caps exports and the housing market cools.

The preliminary 49.7 reading of an index from HSBC Holdings and Markit Economics on Wednesday compared with a final 48.8 in January. A number below 50 points to a contraction. January and February economic data are distorted by a weeklong holiday.

China is cutting banks’ reserve requirements starting on Friday to support an economic expansion that Nomura Holdings estimates may be 7.5 percent this quarter, the least since the global financial crisis.

In Wednesday’s report, a measure of export orders fell, underscoring Commerce Minister Chen Deming’s Feb. 9 caution that the government was not optimistic about the outlook for trade after a decline in shipments in January.

“With a meaningful rebound of domestic demand not in sight, external weakness is starting to bite, adding more downside risks to growth,” said Qu Hongbin, a Hong Kong-based economist for HSBC. The central bank, he added, “should step up policy easing as inflation pressures continue to ease.”

“Although the rate of GDP growth in China is starting to slow, we predict a soft landing with growth around 8 percent this year,” Sam Walsh, the Australia chief executive officer for iron-ore exporter Rio Tinto Group, said in Perth on Tuesday.

Wednesday’s report from China “suggests activities remained weak despite the expected recovery post the Chinese New Year,” said Chang Jian, an economist at Barclays Capital in Hong Kong who formerly worked for the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.

“We expect export growth to halve in 2012 from last year’s pace,” Jian said.

China’s preliminary manufacturing data, called the Flash PMI, is from 85 percent to 90 percent of responses to a survey of more than 400 companies. A separate PMI from the logistics federation and the National Bureau of Statistics, which has a different sample and methodology, showed an expansion in January.

China’s exports and imports fell for the first time in more than two years in January, while home prices failed to rise in any of 70 cities monitored by the statistics bureau.

Economic data in the first two months of each year is distorted by a weeklong Lunar New Year holiday, which was in January this year and February in 2011. Qu cited “quickened production” after the festival as a reason for the gain in the manufacturing gauge from last month.

Shrinking Manufacturing in China May Mean Slower Economic Growth | The Jakarta Globe
 
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World’s largest mobile crane – China's XCMG Group 1,200-ton mobile crane

nPUXy.jpg
XCMG Group QAY1200 model 1,200-ton mobile crane is currently the largest class of wheeled crane in the world. A single unit costs over 100 million RMB.

XCMG Mechanics has won widespread attention at the International Mechanic Exhibition in Brazil :: XCMG GROUP

"XCMG Cradles Largest-tonnage Telescopic Oil Cylinder of 1,200-ton Truck Crane in China
Published date: 2011-09-15 15:56

The telescopic oil cylinder of 1,200-ton all-terrain truck crane manufactured by the independent R&D of XCMG’s Hydraulic Parts Division has passed the trial successfully and been delivered to customers. The brand-new oil cylinder, equipped in the all-terrain truck crane with largest tonnage in China, has helped make the breakthrough of large-tonnage truck crane product research and production in China. And the hydraulic cylinder, the key part of the equipment, is completely manufactured by the independent R&D and production of XCMG.

The successful trial of 1,200-ton all-terrain truck crane telescopic oil cylinder does not only satisfy the demands of XCMG’s developing large-tonnage all-terrain truck crane, but also provides a stronger support of its development of the integrated cylinder of the product with larger tonnage and overseas market expansion in the next phase."

----------

Plus today's news:

China's first artificial skin production base opens

t7H6i.jpg

Composed of dermis and cuticular layers, and containing live cells, this “artificial skin” can carry out the same functions as real skin.

China's first artificial skin production base opens - People's Daily Online

"China's first artificial skin production base opens
By Yang Yonglin (Guangming Daily)
08:18, February 24, 2012

Edited and translated by People's Daily Online

China's first artificial skin production base officially opened in Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi province on Feb. 21, 2012.

It makes China the second country to independently develop and master this cutting-edge technology after the United States. This also marks a solid step forward in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

The research and development of tissue engineering and artificial skin is a major project included in China's 863 Program, or the State High-Tech Development Plan.

Artificial skin technology involves cultivating human cells to create skin that is about the same as normal human skin.

Artificial skin can be used in skin grafting and replacement, and is particularly effective in treating burns and diabetes-caused refractory foot ulcers, as well as in speeding up healing of wounded skin without leaving a scar.

(Editor:厉振羽)"
 
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^^^^ and they teach us... :disagree: :tdown:
a stage 3 efficiency driven economy with 4 times larger GDP combined with faster growth rate than a stage 1 primitive factor driven economy India, that we are more than qualified to lecture you lot
 
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Wen Seen Paring China’s 8% Growth Target on Rise in Inequality: Economy

rl]

an inferior complex indian found a random news trying to prove something, lol....with such massive development, paring is inevitable in China, considering we were planned economy 3 decades ago, professors and cleaners were paid almost the same back then.

but there is a funny country where the rich can build his own massive home in the prime location of the best city and surrounded by millions of slumdogs..lol
 
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Lamborghini says slowing China economy may cut sales
[/url]
lets put this into perspective kid, when there is any negative news about China's development and economy there always with 'will' 'maybe' or 'future'...and at the end day, they never happen,

and when the Indians trying to boast their development and economy growth we also see too many 'will' 'maybe' or 'future'..and at the end day they never happen neighter..

so now we have two clear charactors, China = can do, India = joker

p.s here are few reports on China's luxury car market, so might help with your indian delusion
2011 (First Half) German Car Sales in China and India | Car Sales Statistics
Rolls-Royce posts record car sales on China, US demand
 
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China launches a series of projects to improve nuclear emergency response | China's Great Science and Technology
China launches a series of projects to improve nuclear emergency response
haiyang-nuclear-2-300x200.jpg

2012-02-20 – The National Energy Administration (NEA) said Monday that it has launched a series of research and development (R&D) projects to improve emergency response mechanisms for nuclear power plants in case of extreme disasters.

Learning from Japan’s Fukushima nuclear crisis, which occurred after a devastating earthquake and tsunami on March 11 last year, the projects are aimed at improving safety-related technology used in China’s nuclear power plants, the NEA said in a statement on its website.

The 13 R&D projects, conducted by the China National Nuclear Corporation, China Guangdong Nuclear Power Holding Corporation and the Institute of Nuclear and New Energy Technology in cooperation with Tsinghua University, are expected to be completed around 2013, according to the NEA.

Engineers and researchers will work to develop advanced nuclear power safety technology through targeted research and site analyses of nuclear power plants, the NEA said.

The NEA said it will use the research results to lower the core damage frequencies (CDFs) and large early release frequencies (LERFs) of the reactors.

CDFs and LERFs are risk assessment indicators used to predict the possibility of an incident that could damage a nuclear reactor core. Lower indicators are required for the construction of third-generation nuclear power plants.

In January, Wang Binghua, chairman of the State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation (SNPTC), said China’s first AP1000 nuclear power reactor is expected to go into operation as scheduled by 2013.

China began building its first third-generation pressurized water reactors in 2009, which were also the first to use AP1000 technology developed by the U.S.-based Westinghouse Electric Company.

China had to slow its construction efforts over safety concerns after the Fukushima nuclear crisis.
 
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China’s Growth May Slip to 8.6% This Year as Europe Slows, Report Says

China’s economic growth may slip to 8.59 percent this year due to slowing in Europe, while inflation will ease to 3.3 percent, according to a Xiamen University and National University of Singapore joint forecast.
Growth may bottom out in the second quarter, slowing to 8.35 percent before picking up again, according to the forecast released today at a forum in Beijing. Expansion in first quarter may be 8.42 percent, down from 8.9 percent in the final three months of 2011.
China’s growth is decelerating as Europe’s sovereign-debt turmoil hurts exports and Premier Wen Jiabao continues trying to cool his nation’s property market. Last month’s decline in overseas sales and weaker-than-forecast lending raised concerns that the world’s second-biggest economy may see a sharper slowdown.
“There are many external uncertainties out there,” Wang Yida, a deputy director at the Ministry of Finance, said today at the forum. “We should be wary about the downward pressure on economic growth brought about by sluggish external demand, although the nation’s economic fundamentals remain sound.”
Wang said today the government will further improve the policy of “structural tax cuts” and boost spending in areas including energy conservation, education and technology to help spur domestic demand.
‘Fine-Tuning’
Wen said earlier this month that policy “fine-tuning” needs to start this quarter. The central bank announced a half- percentage-point reduction in banks’ reserve requirements on Feb. 18, the second cut in three months, to boost lending and sustain growth.
The central bank may cut interest rates in both second and third quarters, by 25 basis points each time, trimming the one- year benchmark lending rate to 6.06 percent, the forecast said.
China’s manufacturing may shrink for a fourth month in February, according to a preliminary reading of the purchasing managers’ index from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics released this week, adding to signs growth is weakening.
Gross domestic product expanded 9.2 percent last year, down from a 10.4 percent gain in 2010. Wen will target an expansion of less than 8 percent in his report to the National People’s Congress in Beijing on March 5, the equivalent of the U.S. President’s State of the Union address, according to eight of 15 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month.
Inflation to Ease
Inflation rebounded to a three-month high of 4.5 percent in January as a week-long holiday boosted spending and pushed up prices. Inflationary pressure will ease “significantly” this year as domestic economic growth moderates, the yuan continues to appreciate and external demand weakens, today’s forecast said. Inflation rose 5.4 percent from a year earlier in 2011, exceeding government’s target of 4 percent.
Pace of the yuan gains will decelerate this year as a narrowing trade surplus and slowing capital inflow ease pressure on yuan appreciation, the forecast said. China’s currency may trade at 6.23 to the U.S. dollar by the end of this year, it said.
The nation’s trade surplus is expected to continue narrowing this year as growth in imports will probably outpace that of exports, Zhang Yansheng, a researcher at China’s top economic planning agency, said at the same forum.

Bad News for the chinese... :rolleyes:

China
 
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China’s Growth May Slip to 8.6% This Year as Europe Slows, Report Says

China’s economic growth may slip to 8.59 percent this year due to slowing in Europe, while inflation will ease to 3.3 percent, according to a Xiamen University and National University of Singapore joint forecast.
Growth may bottom out in the second quarter, slowing to 8.35 percent before picking up again, according to the forecast released today at a forum in Beijing. Expansion in first quarter may be 8.42 percent, down from 8.9 percent in the final three months of 2011.
China’s growth is decelerating as Europe’s sovereign-debt turmoil hurts exports and Premier Wen Jiabao continues trying to cool his nation’s property market. Last month’s decline in overseas sales and weaker-than-forecast lending raised concerns that the world’s second-biggest economy may see a sharper slowdown.
“There are many external uncertainties out there,” Wang Yida, a deputy director at the Ministry of Finance, said today at the forum. “We should be wary about the downward pressure on economic growth brought about by sluggish external demand, although the nation’s economic fundamentals remain sound.”
Wang said today the government will further improve the policy of “structural tax cuts” and boost spending in areas including energy conservation, education and technology to help spur domestic demand.
‘Fine-Tuning’
Wen said earlier this month that policy “fine-tuning” needs to start this quarter. The central bank announced a half- percentage-point reduction in banks’ reserve requirements on Feb. 18, the second cut in three months, to boost lending and sustain growth.
The central bank may cut interest rates in both second and third quarters, by 25 basis points each time, trimming the one- year benchmark lending rate to 6.06 percent, the forecast said.
China’s manufacturing may shrink for a fourth month in February, according to a preliminary reading of the purchasing managers’ index from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics released this week, adding to signs growth is weakening.
Gross domestic product expanded 9.2 percent last year, down from a 10.4 percent gain in 2010. Wen will target an expansion of less than 8 percent in his report to the National People’s Congress in Beijing on March 5, the equivalent of the U.S. President’s State of the Union address, according to eight of 15 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month.
Inflation to Ease
Inflation rebounded to a three-month high of 4.5 percent in January as a week-long holiday boosted spending and pushed up prices. Inflationary pressure will ease “significantly” this year as domestic economic growth moderates, the yuan continues to appreciate and external demand weakens, today’s forecast said. Inflation rose 5.4 percent from a year earlier in 2011, exceeding government’s target of 4 percent.
Pace of the yuan gains will decelerate this year as a narrowing trade surplus and slowing capital inflow ease pressure on yuan appreciation, the forecast said. China’s currency may trade at 6.23 to the U.S. dollar by the end of this year, it said.
The nation’s trade surplus is expected to continue narrowing this year as growth in imports will probably outpace that of exports, Zhang Yansheng, a researcher at China’s top economic planning agency, said at the same forum.

Bad News for the chinese... :rolleyes:

China

dont worry about our economy, worry about your collapsing economy.
we have the intelligence to solve our problems, seems indians lack understanding on how to solve your deficits, debt, currency collapse, growth collapse. indian banking system is on the verge of collapse.
 
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World’s largest mobile crane – China's XCMG Group 1,200-ton mobile crane

nPUXy.jpg
XCMG Group QAY1200 model 1,200-ton mobile crane is currently the largest class of wheeled crane in the world. A single unit costs over 100 million RMB.

XCMG Mechanics has won widespread attention at the International Mechanic Exhibition in Brazil :: XCMG GROUP

"XCMG Cradles Largest-tonnage Telescopic Oil Cylinder of 1,200-ton Truck Crane in China
Published date: 2011-09-15 15:56

The telescopic oil cylinder of 1,200-ton all-terrain truck crane manufactured by the independent R&D of XCMG’s Hydraulic Parts Division has passed the trial successfully and been delivered to customers. The brand-new oil cylinder, equipped in the all-terrain truck crane with largest tonnage in China, has helped make the breakthrough of large-tonnage truck crane product research and production in China. And the hydraulic cylinder, the key part of the equipment, is completely manufactured by the independent R&D and production of XCMG.

The successful trial of 1,200-ton all-terrain truck crane telescopic oil cylinder does not only satisfy the demands of XCMG’s developing large-tonnage all-terrain truck crane, but also provides a stronger support of its development of the integrated cylinder of the product with larger tonnage and overseas market expansion in the next phase."

----------

Plus today's news:

China's first artificial skin production base opens

t7H6i.jpg

Composed of dermis and cuticular layers, and containing live cells, this “artificial skin” can carry out the same functions as real skin.

China's first artificial skin production base opens - People's Daily Online

"China's first artificial skin production base opens
By Yang Yonglin (Guangming Daily)
08:18, February 24, 2012

Edited and translated by People's Daily Online

China's first artificial skin production base officially opened in Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi province on Feb. 21, 2012.

It makes China the second country to independently develop and master this cutting-edge technology after the United States. This also marks a solid step forward in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

The research and development of tissue engineering and artificial skin is a major project included in China's 863 Program, or the State High-Tech Development Plan.

Artificial skin technology involves cultivating human cells to create skin that is about the same as normal human skin.

Artificial skin can be used in skin grafting and replacement, and is particularly effective in treating burns and diabetes-caused refractory foot ulcers, as well as in speeding up healing of wounded skin without leaving a scar.

(Editor:厉振羽)"

WOW!

only US and china have developed artificial skin technology.
goes to show china is rapidly advancing in science.
china puts money into science while certain debtor countries put money into importing all their weapons.

---------- Post added at 02:18 AM ---------- Previous post was at 02:18 AM ----------

World’s largest mobile crane – China's XCMG Group 1,200-ton mobile crane

nPUXy.jpg
XCMG Group QAY1200 model 1,200-ton mobile crane is currently the largest class of wheeled crane in the world. A single unit costs over 100 million RMB.

XCMG Mechanics has won widespread attention at the International Mechanic Exhibition in Brazil :: XCMG GROUP

"XCMG Cradles Largest-tonnage Telescopic Oil Cylinder of 1,200-ton Truck Crane in China
Published date: 2011-09-15 15:56

The telescopic oil cylinder of 1,200-ton all-terrain truck crane manufactured by the independent R&D of XCMG’s Hydraulic Parts Division has passed the trial successfully and been delivered to customers. The brand-new oil cylinder, equipped in the all-terrain truck crane with largest tonnage in China, has helped make the breakthrough of large-tonnage truck crane product research and production in China. And the hydraulic cylinder, the key part of the equipment, is completely manufactured by the independent R&D and production of XCMG.

The successful trial of 1,200-ton all-terrain truck crane telescopic oil cylinder does not only satisfy the demands of XCMG’s developing large-tonnage all-terrain truck crane, but also provides a stronger support of its development of the integrated cylinder of the product with larger tonnage and overseas market expansion in the next phase."

----------

Plus today's news:

China's first artificial skin production base opens

t7H6i.jpg

Composed of dermis and cuticular layers, and containing live cells, this “artificial skin” can carry out the same functions as real skin.

China's first artificial skin production base opens - People's Daily Online

"China's first artificial skin production base opens
By Yang Yonglin (Guangming Daily)
08:18, February 24, 2012

Edited and translated by People's Daily Online

China's first artificial skin production base officially opened in Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi province on Feb. 21, 2012.

It makes China the second country to independently develop and master this cutting-edge technology after the United States. This also marks a solid step forward in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.

The research and development of tissue engineering and artificial skin is a major project included in China's 863 Program, or the State High-Tech Development Plan.

Artificial skin technology involves cultivating human cells to create skin that is about the same as normal human skin.

Artificial skin can be used in skin grafting and replacement, and is particularly effective in treating burns and diabetes-caused refractory foot ulcers, as well as in speeding up healing of wounded skin without leaving a scar.

(Editor:厉振羽)"

WOW!

only US and china have developed artificial skin technology.
goes to show china is rapidly advancing in science.
china puts money into science while certain debtor countries put money into importing all their weapons.
 
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an inferior complex indian found a random news trying to prove something, lol....with such massive development, paring is inevitable in China, considering we were planned economy 3 decades ago, professors and cleaners were paid almost the same back then.

but there is a funny country where the rich can build his own massive home in the prime location of the best city and surrounded by millions of slumdogs..lol

Yeah yeah,, thats why your troll brothers like to troll around in the Indian section, my friend, please come to the Indian section if you have time and see what inferiority complex actually means, sure your economy may be times larger, but we all know the cheating and decieveing that goes on... these tricks of we are great might work with americans or someone else, we all know your true colours, so give me that ****... ok??
 
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Yeah yeah,, thats why your troll brothers like to troll around in the Indian section, my friend, please come to the Indian section if you have time and see what inferiority complex actually means, sure your economy may be times larger, but we all know the cheating and decieveing that goes on... these tricks of we are great might work with americans or someone else, we all know your true colours, so give me that ****... ok??
kid, i am in business field for long time, let me tell you some sad truth..within the community Indian businessmen regarded as one of the most unethical and dirty groups...and more annoyingly, Indians always promise 120% while only giving 60% results. if you are really talking about cheating economy, your india economy fits the category very well, 1.2 billion population with as little as just over 1 trillion yet still based on borrowing from foreign institutions plus primitive consumption.

you can believe in whatever you like that China's economy is 'cheated', but in reality there are thousands of indians start coming to China to make money just like how they are swaming into europ and america....guess in the real world the 'promising' 'shinning' slum isnt too much attractive to indians no?


ps. I can tell you are a classic indian dreamer as I can see from your LOCATION: 'superpower'



---------- Post added at 01:55 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:52 AM ----------

^^^^^

LOL, Indiam worried Chinese not buying enough Lambos.
you know when low IQ people run out of argument they start being retard, lol
 
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^^^^ and they teach us... :disagree: :tdown:

Did you even read the article? They're acknowledging their own very real problems. I think India has problems that are no less real, and yet you disparage rather than commend a positive example.

"they teach us" are your words not mine...
 
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