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Man, you chinese are so shameless! like rodents you migrate all over the world, then come to these forums and vent out the frustration of being born inferior in this world with your non existent eyes, ugly faces, poverty struck, slave labor treatment. Get a life outside slumming it out in sweatshops for your western masters and stop exaggerating and fudging your accounts like you so pathetically do. Look outside your country, No one likes you! Your people are made fun of world over. people in your country flea to taste what freedom tastes like. Alas, you have developed the mentality of being institutionalised and oppressed. None of your neighbors can stand you! Be it India, philippines, japan (your ex-masters), Korea etc.

I give it 10 years for china to disintegrates , be it HK or tibet, none of them want to be a part of china. Even supposedly mainland chinese hate china. Your country is a bane to this society, it represents everything wrong with this world, from cheating people by producing junk goods to spreading hate in the world to lying and fudging accounts to make your country look good which it never can. Best case for the world will be that your puny, ugly, cheap race is wiped of this planet! Even the noodle you make is toxic. Tibetan food is also way better than chinese food!

And for idiotic claims of how none of our neighbors want us, let's see. Sikkim was a kingdom and even though ethnically traced back to the same heritage as chinese but preferred to stay with India. Now Bhutan, also ethnically the same as chinese does not have any diplomatic relations with china and hates china while India being it's guarantor state, even the Indian currency can be used over there. Similarly, For all your claims of nepal not liking India, I have been over there and they treat us like brothers, so much so that we can use indian Rupees over there too and Nepalese rupees is pegged to the Indian rupee. As for Bangladesh, India helped them fight for their independence but due to some foreign policies mistakes, the relations had soured but are now back on track. Afghanistan which is part of our greater region consider Indians as their brothers.

Let's look at china's record,

You have territorial problems with philippines, Vietnam. All the Asean members have cold relations with china (if you don't believe, read their papers), Japan (your ex masters) have better ties with India than you. The west sees your country as full of canniving, untrustworthy thugs and so do your neighbors which has made them forge alliances with America and not with China. Get a reality check you dimwits! You are a problem with every country who you have relations with!

That 1962 pwnage must still hurt that humiliated ego.
1962 proved that our civilization is vastly superior to Indian civilization.
You challenged and lost to a better country, now you have been living with the shock and humiliation ever since keeping it bottled up inside you silently.
We are superior to India in everything.
Only thing India does is believe in crazy religions and hope god can save you.

In 1962 no amount of praying to your gods saved you from the worst humiliation in Indian history.
It was a raping of utter humiliation, we treated Indian soldiers like dogs.

Do not ever mess with a superior country like china or you will get another a$$ burning defeat like 1962.

India is nothing but failure, from your commonwealth games disaster, failed Kaveri engine, failed economy, more poverty than Africa, killing children for religious reasons, incest for religious reasons, failed space program, failure at sports, being used as slaves by the whites, India is an overall failed state and failed civilization.
 
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Oh I forgot! Taiwan hates you too!

Actually, the KMT (Taiwan's ruling Kuomintang) is trying to figure out how to reunify without freaking out the U.S.

Right now, it looks like a KMT policy of reunification through stealth as more economic (e.g. trade and financial services), cultural, air, and transport links are established. The final step will be political reunification, which is saved for last.

The U.S. is definitely going to be hysterical when the Taiwanese government eventually informs them that we're reuniting with the mainland.

Chinese reunification - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Chinese reunification at some point in the future is supported to varying degrees in Taiwan by the Kuomintang (KMT), the People First Party, and the New Party, ..."
 
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Well, You guys will obviously be proud of attacking India unaware in 1962 like the little *****'s you are! Contrary to what your oppressors ( read PLA) tells you, you were the aggressors in 1962.

FYI you puny, eye-less C*nts were poorer than India barely 15-20 years ago. So don't repeat your chants of how superior you are. If it weren't for bring bitches of western countries who use you people like dogs and throw you out whenever they don't need you, you would still be farming ,which is anyday more respectable than being a sweatshop ***** for the west. Alas, who can argue with a country whose people are born without eyes. You were born to be an inferior race!

If you look at any western show or movie, chinese are generally shown as janitors or guards while Indians are shown as smart, educated people.This shows how Indians whoop chinese everywhere in the world.

You talk about sports, Tell me one sport you are naturally good at? I know you guys feel proud of being ruled by a set of people who set up factories and pick up people and train them by force whether they want it or not like a master trains a dog in a circus! haha Indians really can't beat chinese at that.

China is hardly a country! half of it wants to split up and go separate ways be it tibet or HK.

Your economy is a joke, most of it is a big lie which your oppressors fudge to keep you happy. China is considered the biggest bubble in mordern economics. Any country can increase its growth rate if the government builds unnecessary buildings and roads. Pay for it first and then talk.

I'd be surprised if china is a country in the next 30 years!

Your claim is completely wrong. Read item #1 in the citation below.

The People's Daily newspaper published repeated warnings to India to stop your "Forward Policy." The Indian Forward Policy was exactly like what it sounds. The Indian Army kept moving the border posts forward into China. Despite repeated warnings, you Indians invaded Chinese territory and were punished. You got off too lightly in 1962.

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Four important lessons from 1962 Sino-Indian border war

1. When the People's Daily newspaper publishes an article warning you to back off, you better listen. It is a prelude to war. The Indians ignored the warning from the People's Daily in 1962 and they paid the price of defeat in the Sino-Indian border war.

This lesson is applicable today to Vietnam and the Philippines. After the People's Daily, Xinhua, and Global Times warned them of military action, Vietnamese and Filipino provocations in the South China Sea stopped.

Sino-Indian War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"On 22 September 1962, the People's Daily published an article which claimed that "the Chinese people were burning with 'great indignation' over the Indian actions on the border and that New Delhi could not 'now say that warning was not served in advance'."[37][38]
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On 14 October, an editorial on People's Daily issued China's final warning to India: "So it seems that Mr. Nehru has made up his mind to attack the Chinese frontier guards on an even bigger scale....It is high time to shout to Mr. Nehru that the heroic Chinese troops, with the glorious tradition of resisting foreign aggression, can never be cleared by anyone from their own territory... If there are still some maniacs who are reckless enough to ignore our well-intentioned advice and insist on having another try, well, let them do so. History will pronounce its inexorable verdict... At this critical moment...we still want to appeal once more to Mr. Nehru: better rein in at the edge of the precipice and do not use the lives of Indian troops as stakes in your gamble." [38]"

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2. Chinese weaponry stationed across from Taiwan can be moved to the Indian sector. In 1962, China moved heavy artillery. In the current context, China can move 1,800 short-range ballistic missiles from the Taiwan sector for use against India.

Sino-Indian War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Chinese attention was diverted for a time by the military activity of the Nationalists on Taiwan, but on 23 June the U.S. assured China that a Nationalist invasion would not be permitted.[30] China's heavy artillery facing Taiwan could then be moved to Tibet.[31] It took China six to eight months to gather the resources needed for the war, according to Anil Athale, author of the official Indian history.[31] The Chinese sent a large quantity of non-military supplies to Tibet through the Indian port of Calcutta.[31]"

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3. PLA's blitzkrieg will slice through the enemy's best troops.

Sino-Indian War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Marshal Liu Bocheng headed a group to determine the strategy for the war. He concluded that the opposing Indian troops were among India's best, and to achieve victory would require deploying crack troops and relying on force concentration to achieve decisive victory. On 16 October, this war plan was approved, and on the 18th, the final approval was given by the Politburo for a "self-defensive counter-attack", scheduled for 20 October.[2]
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At 5:14 am, Chinese mortar fire began attacking the Indian positions. Simultaneously, the Chinese cut the Indian telephone lines, preventing the defenders from making contact with their headquarters. At about 6:30 am, the Chinese infantry launched a surprise attack from the rear and forced the Indians to leave their trenches.[36]

The Chinese troops overwhelmed the Indians in a series of flanking manoeuvres south of the McMahon Line and prompted their withdrawal from Namka Chu.[36] Fearful of continued losses, Indian troops escaped into Bhutan. Chinese forces respected the border and did not pursue.[7] Chinese forces now held all of the territory that was under dispute at the time of the Thag La confrontation, but they continued to advance into the rest of NEFA.[36]
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Western theatre

On the Aksai Chin front, China already controlled most of the disputed territory. Chinese forces quickly swept the region of any remaining Indian troops.[42] Late on 19 October, Chinese troops launched a number of attacks throughout the western theatre.[8] By 22 October, all posts north of Chushul had been cleared.[8]"

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4. In 1962, the United States rejected India's plea for military jets. Today, China is a well-armed thermonuclear power. What are the chances that the United States would be willing to supply India with a single bullet in the next Sino-Indian border war?

Sino-Indian War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Involvement of other nations

During the conflict, Nehru wrote two desperate letters to JFK, requesting 12 squadrons of fighter jets. These jets were necessary to beef up Indian air strength so that an air war could be initiated safely from the Indian perspective. This request was rejected. According to former Indian diplomat G Parthasarathy, "only after we got nothing from the US did arms supplies from the Soviet Union to India commence." [57] In 1962, President of Pakistan Ayub Khan made clear to India that Indian troops could safely be transferred from the Pakistan frontier to the Himalayas.[58]"
 
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Well, You guys will obviously be proud of attacking India unaware in 1962 like the little *****'s you are! Contrary to what your oppressors ( read PLA) tells you, you were the aggressors in 1962.

FYI you puny, eye-less C*nts were poorer than India barely 15-20 years ago. So don't repeat your chants of how superior you are. If it weren't for bring bitches of western countries who use you people like dogs and throw you out whenever they don't need you, you would still be farming ,which is anyday more respectable than being a sweatshop ***** for the west. Alas, who can argue with a country whose people are born without eyes. You were born to be an inferior race!

If you look at any western show or movie, chinese are generally shown as janitors or guards while Indians are shown as smart, educated people.This shows how Indians whoop chinese everywhere in the world.

You talk about sports, Tell me one sport you are naturally good at? I know you guys feel proud of being ruled by a set of people who set up factories and pick up people and train them by force whether they want it or not like a master trains a dog in a circus! haha Indians really can't beat chinese at that.

China is hardly a country! half of it wants to split up and go separate ways be it tibet or HK.

Your economy is a joke, most of it is a big lie which your oppressors fudge to keep you happy. China is considered the biggest bubble in mordern economics. Any country can increase its growth rate if the government builds unnecessary buildings and roads. Pay for it first and then talk.

I'd be surprised if china is a country in the next 30 years!
I know "timetravel"(can't remeber it well) is complete fool, then the "indian1992" in, is you him? Seems fool is not accidental phenomenon!!
We are born without eyes?! Hehe, so don't talk with us!!
You refer the chinese and indian in the western films. I don't find the indian superstar in the western films, they play as walk-on part! And you said the indian are "superior" than chinese in the alien, but why you are so poorer than china? Because the indian leave in india is fool, smart ones choose go out? For us, Whatever where are we, we can do good, just like chinese control economy of many southeast countries, Of couse, you can deny it, and you will.
About sport, You can't do it, you deny it, that's your indian character. And, because you indian insult it, sport has insulted you.
Yes, our economy is "joke", that's your wish! about china furture, we chinese just know work hard to build our country, but for you indian, what you like to do is waiting!
And, Indian life expectancy is short, don't make 30-years-long prediction, you can't see it, you will have be threw in the Ganges River, and decayed, then your sons or daughters drink it!!
 
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China puts its first new 330 kV Smart Substation into operation
China puts its first new 330 kV Smart Substation into operation | China's Great Science and Technology
xinsheng.jpg



2012-06-30 — At 7:50 on June 12, China’s first new 330 kV level intelligent substation — Xin Sheng substation — has officially put into operation in Xi’an after 24-hour test run. This is the highest voltage level in the country put into operation which uses of metal enclosed Switchgear (GIS) equipment in the smart substations. The national grid Shaanxi Electric Power Company to rely on independent innovation in the smart grid research, design, equipment manufacturing, construction, operation and maintenance technology has made new breakthroughs in intelligent project of the main grid and distribution network to form a series pattern.

The substation is located in the southwest of Xi’an Hu County Industrial Park, construction in March 2011, all domestic equipment. The substation for the pilot project of the State Grid Corporation of the second batch of smart substation, the current construction of two 360 000 kVA transformer, 330 kV outlet back to the 110 kV outlet 11 back, the 330,110-kilovolt electrical equipment using GIS equipment, current and voltage transformers are used GIS electronic transformer, intelligent primary equipment by the first device body sensors intelligent component composition, the organic integration of intelligent components and equipment, to achieve a device intelligent. The project was put into operation will help alleviate the power shortage situation of Xi’an southwest grid summer peaks.

In project construction, the national grid company in Shaanxi actively carry out the process of innovation, advance planning, implementation of the site listed on the system and the first model system, so that planning visualization, goal dematerialized explicit quality, full implementation of the infrastructure safety and quality standards, ensure the quality of a boutique.

The substation in the design, construction, promote the use of standardization efforts, co-ordinate security, performance, equipment life-cycle cost relationship, as energy, land, water, and materials engineering model.
 
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Most popular National Geographic Megastructures video: China Ultimate Port

Among the dozen of National Geographic Megastructures videos on YouTube, this one is the best by far. "China Ultimate Port" has 150,793 views and a whopping 312 "likes" vs. 6 "dislikes."

I watched the entire video from beginning to end. It was full of surprising information throughout. I encourage you to watch the entire video. It's very exciting!

 
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do you have the video that showed chinese shipbuilding technology being used by the british many centuries ago?
it was a discovery channel video i think.
 
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China Trade Surplus Widens Slightly in May
Published on 6/11/2012 10:34:52 AM | By TradingEconomics.com, General Administration of Customs

Both exports and imports hit record high values per item, sending the trade surplus to $18.7 billion from the $18.4 billion registered in April.

China exports rose by more than 15 percent in May versus the same period last year, the General Administration of Customs said on May 10th.

Exports beat market expectations, reportedly up by 15.3 percent to $181.1 billion last month compared with the 4.9 percent growth in April. Meanwhile, imports rose 12.7 percent year-over-year to $162.4 billion in May, better than the 0.3 percent increase in April’s import numbers.

As of May 31, China exports are up 8.7 percent to $774.4 billion and imports are up by 6.7 percent to $736.5 billion, according to government figures. The numbers attest to the size and strength of the Chinese economy, along with its continued importance as the world’s manufacturing hub. Despite the fact that China trade growth isn’t booming at teen-level growth rates, the economy is still maintaining robust performances even in a historically weak global economic environment like this one.

Trade with the U.S. is up 12 percent to $190 billion as of May 31 while trade with the European Union is stable, rising 1.3 percent even in dire times. China’s exports to the U.S. rose by 23 percent alone in May, the biggest increase this year. China exports rose 14 percent in April compared to a decline of similar proportions to the E.U.

The eurozone remains a cause for concern even after its finance ministers agreed on Saturday to lend Spain a reported 100 billion euros ($125 billion) to keep its banking sector solvent.
 
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China Takes a Step to Make the Yuan a Rival to the Dollar | Business | TIME.com

"China Takes a Big Step to Make the Yuan a Rival to the Dollar
Beijing looks to its reformist past to launch an important experiment aimed at expanding the country’s role in global finance
By Michael Schuman | @MichaelSchuman | July 2, 2012

PotlR.jpg

Two businesmen talk between skyscrapers in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen in the province of Guangdong (PETER PARKS / AFP / Getty Images)

Shenzhen is where China’s economic miracle began. Back in 1980, Deng Xiaoping and his Beijing comrades launched a special economic zone, or SEZ, in the southern enclave that became the center of a grand experiment in introducing free capitalism into Communist China. Foreign investors were invited to set up factories in the zone, cracking open the tightly controlled economy to the outside world, and as money poured in, attracted by China’s cheap and plentiful labor, world economic history was altered forever. The Asian giant was transformed from an agrarian basket case into the “Workshop of the World” and chief rival to American economic dominance.

Now Beijing is again turning to Shenzhen for a new batch of trials with capitalism by dusting off that old idea of the SEZ and repurposing it. The consequences could prove just as sweeping for both China and the world. On Friday, Chinese policymakers formally revealed that they would turn a slice of Shenzhen into a new sort of SEZ to experiment in currency convertibility. The SEZ, called the “Qianhai Shenzhen-Hong Kong Modern Service Industry Cooperation Zone” will be developed near the border with bustling Hong Kong at a cost of $45 billion. Details on exactly what financial reforms will take place in the zone were sparse. It is possible that the measures will include the permission of some cross-border yuan lending between Hong Kong and mainland firms. But the purpose was made clear: China is will take steps to free up the ways in which its currency, called the yuan or renminbi (RMB), can be used in international finance. “The country’s policy is to gradually open up its capital account and realize the full convertibility of the yuan,” said Zhang Xiaoqiang, vice chairman of China’s influential National Development and Reform Commission. “Qianhai, as the first experimental zone of the country’s modern service industry, should be a pioneer of that.”

In introducing this zone, China is taking an important step towards achieving one of its major goals – elevating itself from solely a global manufacturing power into a global financial power as well. Beijing has been striving to make its currency, called the yuan or renminbi (RMB), more widely used internationally, and thanks to the growing importance of China in global trade, the yuan has been gaining something of a worldwide profile. The yuan is being used more frequently in trade conducted between China and its trading partners. In a mere three years, the share of China’s international trade settled in yuan increased from nothing to 8% in 2011. Beijing has been encouraging this trend through a series of currency swap arrangements to make the yuan more readily available. China inked just such a deal, of nearly $30 billion, with Brazil in June. Some Chinese companies have been permitted to settle trade transactions in yuan through Hong Kong banks, turning the special administrative region into the primary offshore center for business in the Chinese currency. More yuan-dominated securities are available for investors, such as the “dim sum” bonds traded in Hong Kong. As China’s economic might continues to grow, the influence of its currency will inevitably increase with it. “It is apparent that more and more central banks are realizing that alongside the secular decline of the USD (U.S. dollar) as a reserve currency, the RMB is the most likely currency to challenge the near-monopoly position of the USD in the global reserve system,” Jun Ma, Deutsche Bank’s chief economist for Greater China, wrote in a June 25 report.

Yet there are clear limits to how quickly the yuan can become a true rival to the dollar or even the euro. The yuan is still not fully convertible for financial transactions, nor is it widely traded outside of China. The value of the yuan remains controlled by the Chinese government. And since access for foreign investors to Chinese stocks and other assets is restricted, they don’t have much to buy with the yuan they do hold. Until trade in the yuan becomes more market-oriented and transparent, the yuan and yuan-denominated assets become widely available, and China’s financial markets become more open, Beijing’s dream of an internationally prominent currency will be unattainable. “Without an open capital account, the internationalization of the RMB can only achieve less than 10% of its potential,” Jun Ma added. “Capital controls, if not removed, will become the key bottleneck for RMB internationalization in the coming years.”

That’s why the new Shenzhen currency zone is so important. By allowing freer, cross-border financial transactions in yuan, Beijing is taking a step towards dismantling the capital controls that hold back the currency from being a force in the global economy. History tells us that what happens in Shenzhen doesn’t stay in Shenzhen. The market-opening reforms that began in the city in the 1980s were eventually rolled out on a national scale. This time, the currency reforms proposed for the new Shenzhen zone will also likely prove just a first move towards a much wider liberalization process for the yuan, which, in theory, could end with its full convertibility.

That would truly transform the yuan into a major international currency able to pose a challenge to the dollar’s No. 1 status. But we are still very far away from such an outcome. The Shenzhen zone is one important reform in the many, many more that are needed. Jun Ma lists 18 important policy measures he feels need to take place to further the internationalization of the yuan, including opening up Chinese capital markets to foreign investors, promoting the pricing of commodities in yuan and increasing the flexibility of the currency’s exchange rate.

There is little reason to believe such reforms will take place quickly. In fact, there is no guarantee they will happen at all. China’s efforts to liberalize capital flows and its currency regime have been progressing at a glacial pace. The process of valuing the yuan is only slightly more market-oriented than it was seven years ago, when its peg to the dollar was first lifted. Chinese policymakers are still fearful of the sort of free cross-border capital flows that could become destabilizing in times of economic stress. They look upon the country’s capital controls as a key tool that protected the domestic economy from the ravages of the post-Lehman financial crisis in 2008. There are powerful interests, from exporters to state banks, which might be opposed to rapid financial liberalization. Achieving a fully convertible yuan will also require hefty reform of China’s domestic financial sector, which will entail deregulating interest rates and making the banking sector more competitive. With a major political transition due later this year, it is not clear what China’s new crop of cadres think about the pace of economic reform, placing a big question mark over future progress.

Yet the implications of the Shenzhen experiment for the global economy can’t be underestimated, either. Just as Shenzhen altered global manufacturing in the 1980s, it could alter global financial and currency markets in coming years. As China’s miracle continues, that’s probably more a matter of when than if."
 
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China's/World's Top Three Banks generated $104.8 billion in profits

I have good news! We're the new Jews!

China's banks are world's most profitable - Business News - Business - The Independent

"China's banks are world's most profitable
Gideon Spanier | Monday 02 July 2012

The three most profitable banks in the world are now Chinese, illustrating how far financial power has shifted from Europe and America since the credit crunch.

Chinese banks generate 29 per cent of total global profits from the banking industry, against just 4 per cent in 2007. European bank profits fell to 6 per cent, against 46 per cent five years ago.

Industrial Commercial Bank of China is the world's most profitable bank, with pre-tax profits of $43.2bn (£27.5bn). China Construction Bank ($34.8bn) and Bank of China ($26.8bn) are also in the top three, while America's JP Morgan is fourth, according to the annual survey of 1,000 banks by The Banker magazine.

"Europe's loss is China's gain," said Brian Caplen, editor of The Banker, who added that Chinese banks were "making the type of profits that European banks can only dream about".

In a sign of how the eurozone crisis has devastated the continent's banking industry, 24 out of the 25 worst-performing banks came from within Europe.

Britain's Lloyds Banking Group was the ninth-worst performer in terms of losses, plunging $5.5bn into the red, and Royal Bank of Scotland was in 21st with a loss of $1.1bn. UK banks' share of global banking profits has halved to 5 per cent in just five years. However, Mr Caplen said: "While UK banks as a whole have suffered tremendously in terms of their share of global banking profits, the performance of individual UK banks is extremely varied. Some are making huge profits while others make huge losses."

He noted that HSBC was still the seventh most profitable bank in the world, while Barclays, under pressure over the Libor rate fixing scandal, is in 18th place in the top 1,000."
 
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China's June official services PMI rises to 3-month high

BEIJING: China's services sector expanded at its fastest pace in three months in June, an official survey showed on Tuesday, but left intact market expectations that Beijing will deliver more policy measures to support growth in the near future.

The latest survey by the National Bureau of Statistics and the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing (CFLP) showed the purchasing managers' index for the country's non-manufacturing sector rose to 56.7 from 55.2 in May, the best reading since a 10-month high of 58.0 recorded in March.

A reading above 50 indicates expanding activity and one below 50 signals contraction, according to the survey methodology.

The reading from the services sector follows two PMI surveys of China's vast manufacturing industry showing factory activity fell to a seven-month low in June, dampened by both external and domestic weakness.

China's fast-growing services industry, which accounts for about 43 percent of output in the world's Number 2 economy, has so far weathered the global slowdown much better than the factory sector.

"The index shows stable and steady growth momentum of China's services sector. Taking the official PMI indexes under consideration, they all indicate that China's current economic growth shows signs of stabilising," Cai Jin, a vice president at the CFLP, said in a statement accompanying the index.

China's official manufacturing PMI for June confounded market expectations of slippage into contrationary territory and clung to an expansionary reading of 50.2 when it was published on July 1 - albeit at a seven month low.

A sub-index measuring new orders for the services sector r ose to 53.7 in June from May's 52.5, t he highest level so far this year, according to CFLP's Cai.

The input price sub-index fell to 52.1 in June from 53.6 in May, while prices charged held below 50 f or the second straight month, at 48.6 versus May's 48.5.

Easing price pressures provice more room to ease monetary policy without igniting inflation - a key worry for policymakers in Beijing obsessed with managing the impact of costs on social stability.

Economists and traders expect the central bank to move soon to cut the required reserve ratio (RRR) for banks again, and many think another cut to borrowing rates is also possible later this year.

China has lowered RRR in three 50-basis point steps since November 2011, freeing up an estimated 1.2 trillion yuan ($190 billion) for fresh lending. It cut benchmark interest rates by 25 bps in early June to 6.31 percent in a surprise move - its first cut since the depths of the global financial crisis.

On the fiscal front, Beijing has fast-tracked investment projects and rolled out new incentives to spur consumer spending on energy-efficient products.

China's June official services PMI rises to 3-month high - The Economic Times

PMI of 56.7 means expansion by around 13.4%, this is excellent. i think service alone would keep China's growth at least above 7% regardless what happens in rest of the world :cheers:
 
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