| World Bank raises China's growth forecast to 9.3%(chinadaily.com.cn/agencies)
 Updated: 2005-11-03 11:44
 The World Bank has raised its forecast for China's 
economy to grow by 9.3 percent in 2005, and 8.7 percent for 2006, based on 
strong domestic demand and surging exports.
 
 
 
 It was the third time this year the 
bank has raised its forecast for China's economic growth, following predictions 
of 9 percent in August and 8.3 percent in April.
 |  Trucks carry import 
 and export containers at a Yangtze port in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province 
 October 31, 2005. Based on strong domestic demand and surging exports, the 
 World Bank raised its forecast of China's econmic growth rate to 9.3%. 
 [newsphoto]
 |  
 The bank said Thursday 
that stronger-than-expected domestic demand for the upward change. It said low 
inflation was expected to continue.
 
 And, China's economy has already 
achieved its long-awaited landing even with growth rates at around 9 percent, 
the country’s central bank chief economist said Wednesday.
 
 The comments 
suggested no further measures would be needed to hold back Chinese growth and 
that the central bank saw little risk of a bust in the world's sixth-largest 
economy, increasingly a pillar of global growth.
 
 Tang Xu, 
director-general of the research bureau of the People's Bank of China, said the 
yuan would be under pressure to strengthen in the short term and the July 
revaluation had not yet affected the country's rising foreign exchange reserves.
 
 In an interview with the Reuters, Tang played down any imminent threat 
of deflation.
 Asked when the economy would achieve the soft landing that the 
authorities have been trying to effect for more than two years, Tang said: "It 
has already landed."
 
 "Inflation has slowed and investment growth has 
slowed," he said. "The economy has entered a reasonable range. We believe growth 
around 9 percent is reasonable."
 
 He was optimistic about next year, 
too.
 
 
 
 
 
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