China's overheated economy is showing signs of making a "soft
landing", thanks to the government's macro control policies,
particularly the tightening of land and credit supply, a government
think tank said in a recent report. "Our view is that the policies
and measures taken in the latest round of macro control moves are
appropriate and effective, and that the economy is likely to make a
soft landing."
China's overheated economy is showing signs of making a "soft
landing", thanks to the government's macro control policies,
particularly the tightening of land and credit supply, a government
think tank said in a recent report.
"Our view is that the policies and measures taken in the latest
round of macro control moves are appropriate and effective, and
that the economy is likely to make a soft landing," says the report
composed by the economic research institute under the National
Development and Reform Commission, China's top planning body.
The report reflects findings from a field study in Zibo city of
Shandong Province in east China and Baoding
city in north China's Hebei Province.
The study shows that Zibo, which has far more heavy industry
than Baoding, is more affected by the macro controls.
Zibo's economy is dominated by heavy industries such as steel,
coke, cement and textiles. All of these sectors, which have
attracted hefty investments, are targets of the macro controls.
The city recorded only three new major investment projects in
2006, compared to 24 in 2002.
The study also shows that the tightening of land supply is
proving to be the most effective means of reining in runaway
investment.
Both cities have had to delay or abandon projects because they
have used up their entire annual land quota.
The report further says that tight land supply has forced local
governments to improve efficiency in land use. It has also forced
investors to move less profitable industries to the less-developed
hinterland, which is exactly what the government has been trying to
do.
The report calls for further reform to the current land system,
giving farmers greater bargaining power in land sales.
The impact of tighter credit supply, another key macro control
tool, was seen as less positive.
Private firms are more vulnerable than state-owned or
ex-state-owned companies and always become the first victims of
tighter credit supply, the report says.
Figures from the National Bureau of Statistics show that the
Chinese economy is cooling off. Growth for the first three quarters
was 10.7 percent, against 10.9 percent for the first half year and
11.3 percent in the second quarter.
The State Information Center, another think tank under the NDRC,
said last week that the growth rate will slow further to 10 percent
in the fourth quarter, and that the annual growth rate for2006 will
be around 10.5 percent.
(Xinhua News Agency November 8, 2006)
|