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China economy even larger than thought

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by tigermission1, Jan 1, 2006.

  1. tigermission1

    tigermission1 Contributing Member

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    http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/12/20/business/chicon.php

    China economy even larger than thought

    By David Barboza The New York Times

    SHANGHAI - China said Tuesday that its economy was far bigger than previously estimated and that new figures suggested it had probably passed France, Italy and Britain to become the world's fourth-largest economy.

    The announcement sent economists and financial prognosticators scrambling to rethink their assessments of the rise of China and its role on the world stage. Many of them even brought forward their estimations of when China might eclipse the United States as the world's biggest economy.

    "We now have a new snapshot of the Chinese economy," said Hong Liang, an economist at Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong. "This is not slightly bigger, it's a significantly bigger economy."

    China revised its economic data Tuesday after a yearlong nationwide economic census uncovered about $280 billion in hidden economic output in China for 2004. The amount is roughly equivalent to an economy the size of Turkey or Indonesia, or 40 percent of India's economy.

    That means that China's gross domestic product in 2004 was nearly $2 trillion, not the $1.65 trillion previously reported. With its GDP up 17 percent, China was the sixth-largest economy in the world last year.

    And with China expected to report another year of sizzling economic growth in 2005, its economy may already be ranked fourth, trailing only that of the United States, Japan and Germany.

    Economists say there is little doubt now that China is a full-fledged economic superpower. While still far behind the United States, whose economy was valued at about $12.6 trillion last year, China continues to be home to the world's fastest-growing major economy, jumping more than 9 percent over the past few years.

    In 2005, it is expected to record a huge $100 billion trade surplus as its toys, electronics, textiles and other goods flood the world markets.

    China's currency, the yuan, has also become a greater force in global markets since it was revalued slightly this year, dropping its longstanding peg to the dollar.

    It has also been accumulating foreign currency reserves at a very high rate over the past few years. By the end of 2006, economists say, China could have $1 trillion in foreign currency reserves, much of it in U.S. dollar-denominated Treasury notes, making it an even more powerful force in the global markets.

    The new figures provide good news for China, economists say, suggesting that the country's economy is healthier, more diversified and more capable of sustaining growth than previously believed.

    The revised figures, for instance, show that a much stronger services sector has emerged in the Chinese economy, taking some weight off the manufacturing sector. They also show that there are more small and medium-size companies in the country.

    The larger size of the economy bodes well for China because experts had long cited its high investment to GDP ratio as a troubling and unsustainable factor that could eventually overheat its economy.

    That ratio appears slightly more reasonable and sustainable today.

    Stephen Green, a senior economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Shanghai, said the new figures calm some fears about imbalances in the economy here.

    "A bigger economy means all the dangerous ratios, such as investment as a percentage of GDP, all fall," Green said. "And they are usually cited as showing the Chinese economy is in danger or headed for a fall."

    Dong Tao, an economist at Credit Suisse First Boston, said in a statement that China might still be underestimating the size of its services sector by about $200 billion.

    Other experts are moving forward their forecasts of when China might overtake the United States as the world's largest economy. Some have advanced their estimation to about 2035, from 2040.

    The figures are expected to affect government planners and policy makers, altering everything from monetary policy and inflation forecasts to how government officials allocate funds to different regions and sectors of the economy.

    "The most significant implication of this is: Does China have some structural illness or cancer? Or is there an error with the x-ray?" said Hong of Goldman Sachs.

    "The last few years so many famous economists cited the very high investment to GDP ratio as a serious problem," Hong said. "Now it looks like the x-ray machine had a problem, not the patient."
     

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