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China opens key economic policy meeting
BEIJING—China’s top leaders gathered in Beijing Monday to determine
economic policies for 2008 amid efforts to prevent the economy from
overheating and to curb inflation.
The Central Economic Work Conference, an annual event initiated more
than a decade ago, has served as a crucial mechanism for the Communist
Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and the State Council to run the
Chinese economy. Despite spectacular economic and social development
since the start of the year, on the agenda at the conference is how to
cool off booming investment and bank lending, address the soaring trade
surplus, and improve the people’s livelihood, sources said.
The conference will work out specific strategies and resolutions for
these problems China is confronted with in its development. China’s
economy is expected to expand 11.5 percent this year, fueled mainly by
investment spending which rose 26.9 percent in the first ten months.
Its foreign exchange reserve topped $1.43 trillion by the end of
September - a main factor that have triggered the persistent liquidity
problems. Due to rising prices of food, the inflation rate will be 4.5
percent to 4.6 percent for the full year, compared with the government
target of three percent, China’s top statistician Xie Fuzhan said last
week.
In a prelude to the conference, the Political Bureau of CPC Central
Committee convened a meeting last week, saying next year’s top
macroeconomic priorities would be preventing the economy from
overheating and the current price rises from evolving into “evident
inflation”. “China would seek steady progress, give priority to good
development (over excessive development) and adhere to its reform and
opening-up policy,” the Political Bureau was told. The country would
also strive to make bigger progress in improving the people’s
livelihood, especially the lives of low-income families.—Xinhua |