What's new

GDP rises 9.7% in Q1, inflation surges too

ChineseTiger1986

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Jan 27, 2010
Messages
23,530
Reaction score
12
Country
China
Location
Canada
China's economy kept its rising momentum in the first quarter by growing 9.7 percent year-on-year, although Beijing has faced an increasing daunt job to put soaring inflation under control.

Boosted by dynamics in manufacturing, drawn by accelerating consumption from affluent Chinese families, rising exports, and resilience in investment into infrastructure and big-item projects, China' gross domestic product (GDP) amounted to 9.6311 trillion yuan (US$1.72 trillion), the National Bureau of Statistics announced Friday.

However, inflation has shown no signs of abating, six months after Beijing decided to wind down its fiscal and monetary stimulus, enforced in late 2008 to thwart the impact of the global financial crisis. The consumer price index, a major gauge of inflation, jumped 5.38 percent in March, the highest in more than 3 years. The reading was 4.9 percent for both January and February.

Major components causing the higher levels of inflation are food price rise, which rose more than 11 percent in the first quarter. To make things possibly worse, PPI, or producer price index, tracking price rises at the gate of factories, soared 7.3 percent in March, which, economists believe, will be translated to elevated CPI numbers in the coming months.

Analysts therefore predict that inflation in the world's second largest economy won't peak till late in the year, which is to pose a graver difficulty for Beijing to rein in the annual inflation rate within its target – 4 percent, set by the State Council, China's central government.

Monetary tightening is surely to be continued, economists say. The People's Bank of China, the central bank, is expected to raise interest rates, commercial banks' required reserve ratio of total deposits, and the exchange rates of the yuan with major global currencies.

The central bank has this year hiked the required reserve ratio three times, 50 basic points each, and the deposit and lending interest rate twice, 25 basic points each. Lately, the appreciation of the yuan has regained speed. Rising value of the yuan, though making exports more expensive, encourages imports as products shipped from abroad are sold cheaper in China markets, which drags down CPI.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF), earlier this month projected that China's economy will growth 9.6 percent in 2011 and 9.5 percent next year. Together with the World Bank and other international organizations, it has warned that China could face increasing pressure from credit and asset bubbles.

China's Premier Wen Jiabao, discussing the first-quarter statistics with his ministers Wednesday, said that his government will stick to the “prudent monetary policy”, and listed inflation control as Beijing's No 1 job this year.

Chinese economists believe that the outsize excessive lending policy taken by nearly all governments in the aftermath of global financial crisis, and major central banks' “quantitative easing” by injecting tens of billions dollars into the global market through buying government debts, have led to a credit boom and caused price rises across the board.

Some of global credit crest has spilled over to China. Thursday, China's central bank said its foreign exchange reserve has jumped 24.4 percent in the first three months, topping the US$ 3 trillion landmark. Although China's first quarter trade registered $1 billion deficit, the central bank bought in massive foreign currencies on the market. The unplanned injection of RMB credit has been a major factor, causing liquidity over-flow and inflation in China.
The central bank reported Thursday that total national financing rose to 14.27 trillion yuan in 2010. In the first quarter this year, China's total national financing hit 4.19 trillion yuan, 322 billion yuan less than the same period last year, as Beijing intensified its regulation on credit release.

By Li Hong, People's Daily Online

GDP rises 9.7% in Q1, inflation surges too - People's Daily Online
 
. .
Beware of the middle income trap. We are rising into the first "small test" of the middle income range: 5000 USD. This is where countries like Jamaica and Peru have been stuck for 20 years.

The 2nd small test will be 8000 USD which is, at current rates, is in 5 years. This is where Argentina and Mexico have been stuck for decades.

The final test before high income status is 10K USD, which is where Brazil and Malaysia got stuck.
 
.
As long as it stays above 9 % growth rate, Beijing can tighten its monetary policy all they want.
 
.
Beware of the middle income trap. We are rising into the first "small test" of the middle income range: 5000 USD. This is where countries like Jamaica and Peru have been stuck for 20 years.

The 2nd small test will be 8000 USD which is, at current rates, is in 5 years. This is where Argentina and Mexico have been stuck for decades.

The final test before high income status is 10K USD, which is where Brazil and Malaysia got stuck.

That's why CCP is so clever and patient.

The years between 2010-2020 is a very important phase for China. All the healthcare reform and urbanization reform will take place in this period.

If we succeed, then it is the time for US to abdicate its crown.

So no matter how many provocations from US and its allies, we will keep the tolerance and the patience. Otherwise, US would have succeeded their plan.
 
.
That's why CCP is so clever and patient.

The years between 2010-2020 is a very important phase for China. All the healthcare reform and urbanization reform will take place in this period.

If we succeed, then it is the time for US to abdicate its crown.

So no matter how many provocations from US and its allies, we will keep the tolerance and the patience. Otherwise, US would have succeeded their plan.

However, this is also the time period of extreme political instability. Argentina was on our path too, until military dictators overthrew the government. Even South Korea was the same way, with massive protests against the government in the 80's and 90's, clashes with police, and even South Korean students openly supporting Kim Il Sung.
 
.
However, this is also the time period of extreme political instability. Argentina was on our path too, until military dictators overthrew the government. Even South Korea was the same way, with massive protests against the government in the 80's and 90's, clashes with police, and even South Korean students openly supporting Kim Il Sung.

I know you are not very confident about Xi, but at least he is one who decides to increase the wage for the PLA soldier about 40%.

And Li Keqiang will be a powerful Premier, so i think he can keep an eye on him and help him out.
 
.
However, this is also the time period of extreme political instability. Argentina was on our path too, until military dictators overthrew the government. Even South Korea was the same way, with massive protests against the government in the 80's and 90's, clashes with police, and even South Korean students openly supporting Kim Il Sung.

Then I say, legalize adult pornography in all media to keep them sexually busy and pay less attention to government as well as strengthening Chinese nationalism to take back South Tibet (Arunachal Pradesh) from India. *sarcasm* lol
 
.
2010 1q 8.0577 trillion, 2010 39.7983 trillion
2011 1q 9.6311 trillion, 2011 ? 47.5 trillion

If the exchange rate is 6.5, GDP will be $7.32 trillion.
 
. .
5% CPI?
Why I did not feel? This month, in addition to oil prices, other goods prices did not rise.

Are you living in Beijing or Shanghai?

BTW, maybe it is another huyou by CCP to show to the West that we have huge inflation problem.
 
.
5% CPI?
Why I did not feel? This month, in addition to oil prices, other goods prices did not rise.

CPI does not equal to inflation rate which most statistical agencies tend not to answer but you can calculate it yourself.

The nominal GDP growth is 9.6/8.05=19% while the real grow is 9.7%, so the difference between the two is the inflation rate, 10% or so.
 
.
10% is a modest high inflation rate that we all experienced it during most of past years. but higher than that the inflation is gonna be dangerous.
 
. .
Please put these in the economics sticky. This is a defence forum.
 
.
Back
Top Bottom