China's economy grows 7.4% in 2014 Q1
China's economy expanded by 7.4% in the first quarter of the year,
better than what many were expecting. But it is a slowdown from 7.7%
growth in the final quarter of last year.

The Chinese Parliament building |
Other data released with the gross domestic product (GDP) figure
showed industrial output rising 8.8% in March from one year ago.
Retail sales for March spiked by 12.2%, underscoring China's efforts
to boost economic growth via domestic consumption.
Last year China set its growth target for 2014 at 7.5%, part of
efforts to stabilise the economy after years of fast-paced expansion.
China's growth data is closely watched around the region. A slowdown
could hurt Asian economies especially those which export commodities and
industrial components to the world's second largest economy.
China's Premier, Li Keqiang, is trying to downplay the fixation on
GDP figures in the world's second largest economy.
He's now stressing that the quality, rather than the quantity, of
growth is what is important.
China's leaders have said they will tolerate slower growth while they
push through major economic reforms which are designed to create new,
better-paying jobs.
There is the realisation that the old economic model, dependent upon
investment-led growth and exports, has now run out of steam.
The leadership wants to see more domestic consumption to create more
sustainable growth over the long-term. It wants the private sector to
play a bigger role. But in any economic shake-up, there will be winners
and losers.
Implementing the reforms will mean tackling entrenched economic
interests - such as state-owned enterprises - that have gobbled up
resources and done very well out of the old way of doing things.
In recent weeks, the government has announced a mini-stimulus to prop
up flagging growth. But it has ruled out the type of the massive
stimulus which jolted China's economy back to life following the global
financial crisis.
Despite the challenges, the governments hopes to post growth of
around 7.5% for this year.
A sluggish start for the year is not uncommon, due to the Lunar New
Year holiday when many businesses and factories shut down operations for
about two weeks.
But recent data from the manufacturing and industrial sectors have
been weak, raising fears of a prolonged slowdown.
Amid these concerns, China has recently taken more steps to give a
jolt to its economy.
A mini-stimulus measure introduced earlier this month will see
Beijing extending a tax break for small and medium-sized companies, and
ramping up spending on China's railway infrastructure.
In addition, the mainland also took steps to open its capital markets
by tieing-up with Hong Kong, allowing for cross-border stock investment.
The pilot scheme is due to take off in about six months.
And in January, China launched a free-trade zone in Shanghai, seen as
a test bed for reforms in key areas of the economy, such as the
financial and telecom sectors which previously were tightly controlled
by the government.
China also said it will allow foreign firms to make gaming consoles
within the free-trade zone and sell them across China - lifting a ban on
gaming consoles which had been in place since 2000.
Yuan counting China doubled the daily trading band for its currency
this year to 2%.
Analysts are hopeful that the Chinese economy has bottomed out, and
will perform better later in the year.
Julian Evans-Pritchard from Capital Economics said, ''Chinese growth
held up better than expected last quarter and there are signs that
downwards pressure on growth has eased somewhat.''
"While Q1 GDP growth slowed, we believe that the growth momentum has
stabilised in March. Port throughput data and our field study also
suggest that China's trade may have bottomed out, and will become more
resilient than what the current headline numbers suggest," said Zhou Hao
who covers the Chinese economy for ANZ in Shanghai.
China's trade figures for March had shown a sharp drop in both
imports and exports.
Earlier this month the World Bank lowered its growth forecast for the
Chinese economy this year to 7.6%.
- BBC |