Preliminary estimation shows China's gross domestic
product (GDP) totaled 20.9407 trillion yuan (US$2.7 trillion) in
2006, up 10.7 percent year on year, according to latest figures
provided by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)
Thursday.
The growth was 0.3 percentage point higher than that
in 2005. China recently revised its GDP growth in 2005 to the final
figure of 10.4 percent, higher than the original 9.9
percent.
China's GDP growth was 10.4
percent, 11.5 percent, 10.6 percent and 10.4 percent from the first
to fourth quarter of 2006, said Xie Fuzhan, commissioner of the NBS
at a press conference.
According to previous figures released by the NBS,
China's GDP grew 10.3 percent, 11.3 percent and 10.4 percent in the
first, second and third quarter, so possibilities exist for the
rate in fourth quarter to be revised to a higher level.
The Chinese government timely took a series of
macro-control policies last year, effectively preventing the
economy from going fast into overheated, Xie said.
China's primary, secondary
and tertiary sectors posted a respective 2.47 trillion, 10.2004
trillion and 8.27 trillion yuan in added value, with the secondary
sector, including industry, manufacturing and mining, growing at
the fastest pace -- 12.5 percent -- last year, according to
Xie.
China's consumer price index
(CPI), a major inflation index, grew by 1.5 percent in
2006.
Housing prices in the country's 70 medium-sized and
large cities went up by 5.5 percent in 2006 over the previous year
and the increase rate was 2.1 percentage points lower than that for
2005.
Investment in property development reached 1.938
trillion yuan, up 21.8 percent, or 0.9 percentage points higher
than the previous year.
China's fixed asset
investment totaled 10.987 trillion yuan in 2006, up 24 percent year
on year, or two percentage points lower than the same period a year
earlier.
Chinese urban and rural residents all see their per
capita disposable income record a double-digit growth in 2006,
faster than the previous year, Xie said.
Urban residents in China earned 11,759 yuan in
per-capita disposable income last year, up 12.1 percent from the
year earlier.
Last year, rural residents in China had their
per-capita income increase by 10.2 percent to 3,587
yuan.
The registered urban unemployment rate stood at 4.1
percent by the end of 2006, 0.1 percentage points down from the
year-end of 2005.
(Xinhua News Agency January 25, 2007)
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