China's efforts to slow down the economy by reining in investment
in industries such as steel and cement are working, Vice-Premier
Huang Ju said yesterday.
Speaking at the opening ceremony of the first World Industrial and
Commercial Organizations Summit (WICO Summit), Huang said: "The
macroeconomic measures that were adopted last year are showing
incremental success and ease prominent contradictions that have
affected China's economic development."
The summit, initiated by the China Federation of Industrial
Economics, is expected to be a platform for world industrial and
commercial organizations (ICOs) to exchange ideas.
China has tightened land and credit approvals to cool an industrial
investment spree that causes power shortages, clogs transport links
and drives up raw materials prices.
Investment in China's factories, roads and other fixed assets grew
26 percent in August, slowing from 31.1 percent for the first seven
months of the year, according to official data released last
week.
China's economy is still growing at a "steady and fast" pace and
should continue to expand at an annual 7 percent rate for the next
few years, Huang said.
The nation's gross domestic product grew by 9.7 percent in the
first half of the year.
And an open and growing China will benefit all, said the
vice-premier.
"China's continued reform and opening-up and sustained economic
growth will not only benefit the 1.3 billion Chinese people, but
also create a bigger space for international trade and investment,
lending a strong momentum to the common development of all
nations," the vice premier said.
The nation will continue welcoming foreign investors, Huang
added.
Commenting on the role of ICOs, Huang said they are an important
link to bridge enterprises and governments and are conducive to
promoting the multilateral trade system and strengthening
co-operation among enterprises in different countries and
regions.
He
also said that China will accelerate legislation on ICOs to clarify
their legal status to best utilize their roles of working on
industrial standards, promoting international exchanges and
mediating over trade friction.
Delegates from more than 70 countries and regions hailed the WICO
Summit, hoping to regularize it as a permanent channel for
multilateral dialogue.
This dialogue channel will be all the more important as the world
economy is recovering and the once-deadlocked Doha Development
Agenda of the World Trade Organization comes back on the right
track, said Dan Christman, senior vice-president of the United
States Chamber of Commerce.
He
also said his chamber of commerce has an interest in hosting the
second WICO summit in order to keep the ball rolling.
(China Daily September 20, 2004)
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