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Consumers To Drive Growth: Vice-Premier

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  • Consumers To Drive Growth: Vice-Premier

    CONSUMERS TO DRIVE GROWTH: VICE-PREMIER

    EastDay.com
    2010-01-29 08:09

    Special Report: Global Financial Crisis >>

    Vice-Premier Li Keqiang reaches the podium to deliver his speech on
    the second day of the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos
    yesterday.

    'Excessively reliant on investment and exports'

    Vice-Premier Li Keqiang said last night that China will seek to
    boost domestic consumption to drive forward its booming economy,
    acknowledging that export growth alone was unsustainable for
    development.

    Li, speaking at the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, said
    China would look to increase employment and income levels of its poorer
    people, hoping to unleash the huge potential of the Chinese consumer.

    He also said the government would break monopolies and encourage
    competition while integrating more deeply into the global economy.

    China recently surpassed Germany as the world's top exporter, but
    Li noted that economic strategies have been "excessively reliant on
    investment and exports".

    China has emerged as one of the key countries of interest at the Davos
    forum with its economy set to overtake Japan's as the second-largest
    this year, and as the voice of the developing world.

    However, its increasing clout has also led to conjecture on whether
    it could play a role that lives up to global expectations.

    As Kristin Forbes, a former member of the White House Council of
    Economic Advisers, said: "China is the West's greatest hope and
    greatest fear."

    Amid the hope-and-fear scenario, China should not overreach itself
    while actively participating in global coordination to solve the
    world's problems, Chinese analysts said.

    Discussions of China's role amid and after the global financial crisis
    have been heated in mainstream Western medias, especially during the
    forum. More than 2,500 leaders from over 90 countries, representing
    business, government and social sectors are attending the event.

    The West expects Beijing to be more engaged in global affairs but
    also anticipates increasing trade friction with the world's largest
    exporter.

    "As it grows, China should do more in solving the world's problems,
    but only according to its capabilities," said Wang Dong, a researcher
    with Peking University's School of International Studies.

    China has made consistent efforts in helping the world out of the
    financial crisis, among other initiatives. It has, for example,
    signed agreements with many neighboring economies on currency swaps
    to help regional financial stability.

    Its economy expanded by an impressive 8.7 percent year-on-year in 2009,
    contributing to about half of the world's total economic growth.

    Although it remains a developing country, expectations are high that
    it could do more to help the world, Wang said.

    The mismatch partly comes from lack of understanding of China's real
    situation, said Yang Mian, researcher at Communication University
    of China.

    "Many foreigners come to China but they mainly visit mega cities,
    such as Beijing and Shanghai, where living standards are quite high,"
    he said.

    "But China is a country with very uneven development. In the
    countryside, for example, people in many places are far less affluent
    than those in Beijing or Shanghai and many are stuck in poverty.

    "We should not become complacent with commendations from overseas as
    GDP keeps expanding."

    The country's per capita GDP remains low, ranking 106th in the world in
    2008, ahead of Iraq but behind Armenia, according to the International
    Monetary Fund. China also faces such problems as an inadequate social
    security network and poverty.

    "China must learn to explain to the world what it really is," said
    Chen Gong, chairman of Beijing-based Anbound Consulting.
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