The Borneo Post

China’s economic growth to slow to 6.5 per cent in 2017

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BEIJING: China’s economic growth will slow to 6.5 per cent next year and the yuan will continue falling against the dollar, a top Chinese think-tank said Monday.

The prediction follows a raft of positive data earlier this month that raised hopes of an end to the slowdown.

But the economy – the world’s second largest – still “faces increasing downward pressure”, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences ( CASS) warned, according to a transcript on the official china.org.cn website.

It also predicted that the yuan, currently hovering around eightyear lows – would lose another three to five per cent against the dollar.

The government-linked thinktank made the forecasts at an annual press conference, three days after Chinese leaders wrapped up a key economic meeting known as the Central Economics Work Conference.

At the conclave, attended by President Xi Jinping, leaders vowed to fix the problems ailing the partially-planned economy, taking aim at sclerotic stateowned enterprise­s and property speculatio­n that has raised fears of a massive bubble about to burst.

Last year CASS predicted the economy would grow at a rate of 6.7 per cent.

So far, that prediction has been spot on: the economy expanded 6.7 per cent for three consecutiv­e quarters this year, the slowest pace since the global financial crisis.

This year’s prediction of 6.5 per cent plumbs the lower depths of the national goal of between 6.57.0 per cent.

It would be the lowest annual figure since 1990 when it clocked in at 3.9 per cent.

The country’s five-year plan for economic and social developmen­t pledged average growth of at least 6.5 per cent a year over the 2016-2020 period – implying that at times it could be lower.

Several factors have helped China’s economy stay on target, CASS said, including stabilisat­ion of consumer spending growth, a pick-up in real estate investment growth, and robust infrastruc­ture spending.

Imports and exports are forecast by CASS to decline by 9.5 and 7.2 per cent respective­ly in the current year compared to 2015.

Imports for November beat expectatio­ns, moving from negative to positive territory and raising hopes that dwindling growth had stabilised.

China is seeking to make a di f f icult transit ion from dependence on exports and heavy industry towards consumptio­n as the key driver of the economy, but the process is proving bumpy.

Consumer spending is expected to slow from 10.0 per cent in 2016 to 9.5 per cent in 2017, CASS said.

The country already faces a number of challenges, ranging from underperfo­rming and overproduc­ing steelmaker­s to massive capital outflows as investors seek better and more stable investment­s abroad.

But next year it wi l l also face an uncertain economic environmen­t, with the next US president Donald Trump threatenin­g to slap the country with massive tariffs and brand it a ‘currency manipulato­r’ despite evidence that it is struggling to prop up the yuan.

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