Analyst: Production expected to increase faster in rest of year ( 2003-10-16 03:18) (China Daily)
China's industrial output grew by 16.3 per cent in September compared with a
year ago to 370.4 billion yuan (US$44.6 billion), the National Bureau of
Statistics said yesterday.
The year-on-year growth rate was 17.1 per cent in August and 16.5 per cent in
July, the bureau said earlier.
For the first nine months, industrial output grew a year-on-year 16.5 per
cent to 2.89 trillion yuan (US$349.1 billion).
Production by State-owned companies, shareholding companies and
foreign-funded companies slowed down in September, but the output of
collectively owned companies accelerated, the bureau said, without giving any
reasons.
The bureau said five major industrial sectors were the major contributors to
the whole industrial sector: electronics and telecommunications equipment,
machinery, transportation equipment, ferrous metals and chemicals.
The five sectors contributed 8.5 percentage points to September's industrial
growth, the bureau said.
The output of cars surged 69.7 per cent in September from a year earlier to
191,300 vehicles, while output of all kinds of vehicles rose a year-on-year 36.8
per cent to 427,600.
China generated 158.5 billion kilowatt-hours of electricity in September, up
15.5 per cent, the bureau said.
Exports handled in September by the industrial sector were worth 241.7
billion yuan (US$29.1 billion), a year-on-year increase of 26.1 per cent.
Wang Zhao, a researcher with the State Council's Development Research Centre,
said the rapid industrial growth suggested the country's economy has maintained
a healthy development momentum.
"Production will continue to grow at a higher rate in the remaining months of
this year,'' he said.
The robust fixed-asset investment expected this year will benefit heavy
industry such as cement and steel, while the relatively stable consumer demand
will benefit light industry such as companies producing air-conditioners and
washing machines, he said.
"The rapid industrial growth will keep the country's economy growing at a
higher rate this year,'' Wang said.
He added that the industrial output contributed more than 50 per cent to
overall gross domestic product.
The bureau is expected to release the GDP figure for the first nine months
tomorrow. Earlier figures suggest the country's economy grew a year-on-year 8.2
per cent during the first half of this year.
Yao Jingyuan, spokesman for the statistics bureau, said China is capable of
meeting this year's economic-growth goal of 7 per cent, set at the beginning of
the year.
But researchers at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said China's
economy could even grow by 8 per cent this year, despite the outbreak of severe
acute respiratory syndrome (SARS).
The influence of SARS on China's social and economic development has not been
as great as the impact of the Asian financial crisis in 1997, said one
researcher who refused to be named.
The economic effects of the virus will be easier to overcome than the Asian
meltdown or the September 11 terrorist attacks in the United States in 2001, the
researcher said.