World Bank forecasts China recovery this year

china

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[SIZE=+1]World Bank forecasts China recovery this year[/SIZE]
China National News
Tuesday 7th April, 2009
(IANS)

Beijing, April 7 (Xinhua) A recovery in China, fuelled largely by the country's huge economic stimulus package, is likely to begin this year, the World Bank (WB) said Tuesday in its mid-year report.

As countries in the East Asia and the Pacific region prepare for an expected surge in joblessness resulting from the global economic slowdown, a ray of hope may be emerging with signs of the Chinese economy bottoming out by mid-2009, said the report, which is a half-year assessment of the region's economic health.

Vikram Nehru, the WB's chief economist for the region, said that the forecast for China's recovery is based on recent positive statistics such as loans, imports and purchase management index (PMI).

He emphasized that all forecast made under the current global financial crisis is uncertain, and more sure conclusion on China's recovery still relies on further data in the coming months.

Chinese banks extended 2.69 trillion yuan ($393 billion) of loans in the first two months to fund the construction spree under the government's 4-trillion yuan ($584.8 billion) stimulus package.

The Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) of China's manufacturing sector rose for the fourth straight month in March to 52.4.

A PMI of above 50 suggests expansion, while one below 50 indicates contraction. Despite stronger growth driven by government stimulus package, there were also pessimistic signs in market-based investment, which threw more uncertainty on recovery of the Chinese economy, said Louis Kuijs, senior economist with the WB's China Office.

The report, focusing on economic development of East Asia, forecast that real gross domestic product (GDP) growth in developing East Asia will reach only 5.4 percent in 2009, 1.3 percentage points lower than its previous forecast in December.

The bank defines developing East Asia as China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Mongolia, Papua New Guinea and the island economies of the Pacific.

The report said the recovery of the Chinese economy will potentially contribute to the region's stabilisation, and perhaps recovery.

But with China still heavily reliant on exports to world markets that continue to contract, the report warned that a truly sustainable recovery in the East Asia and Pacific region ultimately depends on developments in the advanced economies.

The bank in mid-March cut its forecast for China's 2009 economic growth to 6.5 percent from 7.5 percent.

Nehru said China should focus on improving its economic structure while stimulating short-term GDP growth.

Shifting China's output from exports to domestic needs will help provide immediate stimulus while laying the foundation for more sustainable growth in the future, he said.

China National News
Tuesday 7th April, 2009
(IANS)

 

china

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darkbeaver

I don't think so.
Your thinking will not affect the recovery in any way .
 

china

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Ranch Hand
Isn't the Internet heavily censored in China?
I think that whatever I will respond to this question will convince your heavily conditioned mind.You just have to come and see.
Why do you only post 'happy talk'?
Why not ;are you a sad person .
 
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RanchHand

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Feb 22, 2009
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Well given what I've read about Internet censorship in China that you probably don't have access to, and the fact that most of your posts are nothing but cut and pastes of articles about the glorious state, it's reasonable to suspect you are in fact a Chicom.
 

china

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RanchHand

Well given what I've read about Internet censorship in China that you probably don't have access to, and the fact that most of your posts are nothing but cut and pastes of articles about the glorious state, it's reasonable to suspect you are in fact a Chicom.

All these happy articles about China are printed outside of China
....Well given what I've read about Internet censorship in China that you probably don't have access to
Don,t believe everything you hear in Canada or US .D

[SIZE=+1]And here another one of the
[/SIZE]
[SIZE=+1]"cut and paste " articles about the glorious state .[/SIZE]
[SIZE=+1][/SIZE]
[SIZE=+1]China sentences four Tibetans to death for March 2008 Lhasa riots[/SIZE]
China National News
Thursday 9th April, 2009
(ANI)

London, Apr 9 : A court in Tibet has sentenced four people to death for their part in rioting in Lhasa last year.

Fierce anti-China riots broke out in Lhasa in March last year and spread across Tibet as China was preparing to host the Beijing Olympic Games.

Two of the four death sentences are suspended and could be changed to life sentences if the defendants demonstrate good behaviour. A fifth person was given a life sentence.

The first known death penalty cases in the region since 2002 were handed down yesterday by the Lhasa Municipal Intermediate People's Court.

Tibetan exile groups have condemned the convictions, which they say are politically motivated and carried out without adequate legal safeguards.

Lobsang Gyaltsen will be executed for arson attacks on two garment shops in central Lhasa on March 14 that killed a shop owner. The same sentence was handed down to Loyak for torching a motorcycle dealership in Deqen Township, which left five people dead, The Guardian reported.

Suspended death penalties were passed on an accomplice, Kangtsuk, and on Tenzin Phuntsok who reportedly confessed to starting a separate lethal fire. A fifth defendant is still being tried.

"The three arson cases are among the crimes that led to the worst consequences in the March 14 riot," the court spokesman was quoted by Xinhua, as saying. "Their crimes incurred great losses to people's lives and property and severely undermine the social order, security and stability."

Free Tibet attacked the sentences, saying that they lacked legal safeguards:

China's state media claimed the trials were open and the defendants were represented by lawyers, but there was no way to assess this claim as access to Tibet is heavily restricted for foreign reporters
 

Said1

Hubba Hubba
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I don't know, the recent currency swaps and their aim to make it their currency an 'Asian reserve currency' might be good for them.