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Business
Print Edition> Business
UPDATED: July 16, 2012 NO. 29 JULY 19, 2012
Staying on Target
Chinese economic growth is still within an acceptable range and is expected to pick up in the third quarter
By Lan Xinzhen
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SET SAIL: A cargo ship is loaded at a container berth in Huanghua Port of Cangzhou, Hebei Province (YANG SHIYAO)

China's economic growth continues to slow as predicted. According to figures from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), China's GDP grew by 7.6 percent in the second quarter, 0.5 percentage points lower than the growth in the first quarter. The GDP growth has dropped for five consecutive quarters. Its growth rate in the first half of the year was 7.8 percent. Meanwhile, the growth of the consumer price index (CPI) declined to 2.2 percent in June, further alleviating the inflation burden on consumers. Now, slow economic growth and low inflation have become the main characteristics of the Chinese economy.

Despite the slowdown, worries of a possible hard landing are unfounded since growth is still within the expected range set by the government earlier this year. According to the government work report, the target of economic growth this year is 7.5 percent.

To cope with the slowdown, the government has launched a series of measures, as addressed in Beijing Review's cover story of issue No. 25 this year. Particularly, the People's Bank of China, the country's central bank, lowered benchmark interest rates on July 6 for the second time in a month. This indicates the government's intention to relax monetary supply and raise market liquidity to stimulate the economy.

Zhang Liqun, a researcher at the Development Research Center of the State Council, said the government's top priority must be preventing the slowdown from affecting people's lives.

Why so slow?

Compared with the strong economic growth of the past three decades, especially the robust recovery after the global financial crisis in 2008, the Chinese economic growth has seen a downturn since the fourth quarter of 2010. If the economy experiences a hard landing, it would send shockwaves throughout the world. In spite of a series of measures by the Chinese Government to stabilize growth, economic figures for the second quarter still showed no signs of a pickup.

The sluggish economy is the result of a simultaneous slowdown of both external and domestic demand, said a report by the Bank of Communications.

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