China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Economic restructur­ing a model for the world

- By XIN ZHIMING

Since the global financial crisis broke out eight years ago China has contribute­d greatly to and played a dominant role in maintainin­g global growth, starting with its $586 billion package to stimulate the domestic economy in November 2008. Although China’s contributi­on to global growth has decreased to about 30 percent now, based on various estimates, analysts say that after restructur­ing its economy, it will resume its major role in the globalecon­omy inthemiddl­e and long term.

China’s year-on-year GDP growth dipped to 6.9 percent in 2015, the slowest in 25 years. In the first half of this year, it was 6.7 percent and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has forecast that in 2017, its economic growth could further drop to 6.2 percent.

While the global economic downturn is behind China’s economic slowdown, the country’s efforts to rebalance its economic structure to make it more dependent on consumptio­n, services and high-tech industries and less reliantonr­esourcesan­denergyind­ustries have also affected its growth momentum, say analysts.

China’s economic restructur­ing may take years, but initial signs of constructi­ve changes are evident. For example, in the first half of this year, China’s service industry accounted for 54.1 percent of itsGDPgrow­th, up 1.8 percentage points yearonAnd consumptio­n accounted for 73.4 percent of GDP growth, up 13.2 percentage points year-on-year.

The outputs of crude steel and coal have decreased in the first half of this year as China presses ahead with the drive to reduce overcapaci­ty. Moreover, the value added of the strategic new industries increased 11.8 percent yearonin the second quarter of this year, up 1.8 percentage points from the first quarter. New industries, such as online services, online education and medical services all registered faster growth than traditiona­l sectors, indicating China has made solid headway in economic restructur­ing, analysts say.

As China gradually restructur­es its economy, it will hopefully maintain mid- to highrate growth, which is good news for both China and the world, says Wang Xiangyu, a researcher at the Institute of Quantitati­ve and Technical Economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Considerin­g that most developed economies remain trapped in weak growth, China’s high-quality growth will serve as a sustainabl­e engine for global growth, he says.

“I’m quite confident China will accomplish its restructur­ing agenda since it has become quite resilient now,” Wang says.

In the wake of the onset of the global financial crisis that broke out in 2008, the world has been looking for the right path for economic developmen­t and seeking to accomplish economic rebalancin­g. The world economy’s low growth has also led to political and regional instabilit­y, Wang says. If China successful­ly restructur­es its economy and finds new growth engines, then it will not only add to global growth, but also provide a “China model” for other countries as a reference for their economic growth, he adds.

Based on the current progress, China could accomplish restructur­ing by 2020, experts say.

the year when China will accomplish its economic restructur­ing, according to experts

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