BEIJING: The World
Bank<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4280122.cms#>lowered
its forecast for China's 2009 economic growth on Wednesday but
warned Beijing that it would be thwarting its own  medium-term goals if it
tried to offset the slowdown by further boosting
investment<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4280122.cms#>.


In a quarterly economic update, the bank cut its projection of gross
domestic product growth this year to 6.5 percent from the 7.5 percent
outcome it had forecast in November. It said there were both upward and
downward risks to its outlook.

The global crisis would be a drag both this year and next, mainly via weaker
exports and non-government investment, but the bank said China's economic
fundamentals were still strong enough to give policymakers the luxury of
looking well beyond 2009.

The bank welcomed the inclusion of steps to boost consumption in the
government's 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package since
over-reliance on capital-intensive investment could damage the pace of job
creation and the quality of growth.

Indeed, it said there was room for a further shift toward consumption and
for less emphasis on capital spending in order to address the need to make
growth more sustainable economically, socially and environmentally.

"Looking ahead, less focus on targeting short-term GDP growth would allow
more focus on the rebalancing and reform agenda.

"Meanwhile, somewhat lower overall growth is not likely to jeopardize
China's economy<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4280122.cms#>or
social stability, especially if the adverse consequences can be
limited
via the social safety net, preferably combined with education," the report
said.

The forecasts of most commercial bank economists for 2009 growth are
clustered in a range of 5 percent to 8 percent.

COULD BE WORSE

The recommendations fly in the face of the ruling Communist Party's
determination to do whatever is necessary to meet its self-imposed target of
8 percent growth this year.

Just last Friday, Premier Wen Jiabao said the government was ready to roll
out extra stimulus measures if needed.

But the World Bank said there may be limits to how much
money<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4280122.cms#>can
be spent efficiently on traditional investment projects.

What's more, the government cannot hope to take up all the slack left by the
collapse in exports and knock-on drop in private investment, the bank said.

As it is, the bank already expects 4.9 percentage points of this year's
projected 6.5 percent growth to stem from government-influenced investment
and public-sector consumption.

"China's economy cannot escape the impact of the global weakness.
Government-influenced activity makes up a modest share of the total: it
cannot and should not offset fully the downward pressures on market-based
activity," the report said.

The bank tempered this message of resignation with the assurance that China
would continue to grow substantially faster than most other countries this
year and next.

Indeed, the stimulus is already supporting activity and sentiment, even if
it is too early to expect a sustained rebound, the World Bank said.

RISING YUAN

The report also made the following points:

-- GDP grew an estimated 2.5 percent between the third and fourth quarters
of 2008 at a seasonally adjusted annual rate.

-- The drag on production from inventory overhang should be modest since
surveys suggest the pace of destocking is declining.

-- China will lose 16-17 million non-farm jobs in 2009.

-- Raising the threshold at which income tax is payable would be bad policy
because it would favor a well-off minority of about 20 million taxpayers.
Cutting social security charges paid by 200 million Chinese would be a
better option.

-- To cushion the risk of deflation, now is a good time for Beijing to
remove remaining price controls on industrial inputs such as energy, water,
utilities and natural resources.

-- The yuan is likely to keep strengthening in the next decade in
inflation-adjusted,
trade<http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/4280122.cms#>-weighted
terms given China's prospective balance-of-payments and productivity trends.


-- Pushing the currency lower in the short term would not help revive
exports, because global demand is weak, and would slow China's transition to
consumption-led growth.


B.KARTHICK
RESEARCH ANALYST
WWW.KENCES1.BLOGSPOT.COM <http://www.kences1.blogspot.com/>

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