Chinese
policies good for Asian economic growth
Asian nations must seize opportunities offered by China’s growing
economic importance to regear their economies to ensure they
are not left behind experts said recently.
The region must move fast to adjust
its policies to China’s emergence as possibly the world’s third
largest economic powerhouse after the United States and Japan,
they told the World Economic Forum’s East Asia Economic Summit.
Singapore’s Senior Minister of State for trade and education
Tharman Shanmugarantnam said, Asia’s response to China’s presence
over the next five years would determine whether it would be
marginalized and face an economic slowdown or enjoy high growth."
He said plans by the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to create the world’s biggest
free trade zone with China in 10 years offered the biggest future
opportunity. According to Chinese official estimates, he said,
every one billion dollars of Chinese exports required some 500
million dollars in imports of raw materials.
The eventual removal of trade barriers
following China’s entry into the World Trade Organisation (WTO)
last year, its economic diversification and low production costs
also are promising features. "There are opportunities for us
but nothing is given. China is not a given opportunity or a
given threat. It all depends on how we respond," he said on
the final day of the summit.
China's
economy to grow by at least 7.8%
China’s economy will grow by 7.8
percent or more this year, state media reported recently a government
think tank as saying.
The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
made the prediction in a report issued, the Economic Information
Daily said.
The academy attributed the growing
economy to the government’s fiscal policies and to the continuing
expansion in domestic demand.
Foreign trade has also greatly
increased, as has actual foreign direct investment.
The academy predicted that in 2003,
barring any unexpected international or domestic events or serious
natural disasters, the economy would continue to grow at a rate
of 7 percent or higher.
China’s economy grew 7.8 percent
in the first half of 2002, compared with the same period last
year. The economy grew by 7.3 percent last year.
Chinese officials have expressed
increasing confidence in recent months that economic growth
will exceed the government’s seven percent target this year
because of massive state spending and rising exports.
The central bank in a recent report
said this year’s growth may top 7.5 percent, while some state
researchers are even more bullish, expecting a 7.7 percent rise.
Japan's
economy policy praised
The United States recently praised
the commitment and determination of Japanese Prime Minister
Junichiro Koizumi as his government struggles to reignite an
economy which once powered Asia’s explosive growth.
In an unusual move, State Department
spokesman Richard Boucher issued a statement reflecting US satisfaction
at recent moves to address the crisis in Japan’s debt-laden
banks and the expanded portfolio of new finance policy chief
Heizo Takenaka.
Boucher said that Washington welcomed
the "commitment and determination the Koizumi administration
has shown to seriously address Japan’s economic problems," Boucher
said.
Economy
still recovering : Japan
Japan recently left its key economic
assessment unchanged in October, but warned a slump in Tokyo
stocks and concerns over the US economy cast a shadow over the
fragile recovery.
In its monthly report of the economy,
the government maintained its assessment for the third consecutive
month, saying signs of a "moderate" recovery were observed in
some areas.
But the pace of recovery was slowing
and the future of the economy remained uncertain, the government
said in the report, largely regarded as a verdict on current
conditions of the nation’s economy.
"Though we maintained the overall
economic assessment, the result was mixed in a tug-of-war between
upgrades and downgrades in different areas of the economy,"
a government official said.
"The economic environment has become
more severe than in the previous month thanks to the continued
weakness in the domestic stock market and concerns over the
US economy, which weighs heavily on the recovery in final demand
in Japan," the official conceded.
Japan's
trade surplus triples
Japan’s trade surplus with the
rest of Asia more than trebled in August, thanks to healthy
demand for Japanese steel products, semiconductors and electronic
parts, the finance ministry said recently.
Japan’s surplus with the region
rose 335.8 percent from a year ago to 382.0 billion yen, increasing
for the sixth straight month. Exports soared 17.3 percent to
1,850.7 billion yen while imports sank 1.4 percent to 1,468.7
billion yen.
"Asian demand remained strong.
The rise of Asia-bound exports helped expand Japan’s overall
exports figure," said Junji Ota, economist at Okasan Research
Institute.
Thai
economy grows by 5.1
Thailand’s resurgent economy grew
5.1 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, prompting
the government’s economic advisory body recently to lift its
full year forecast to up to 4.5 percent.
The National Economic Social Development
Board (NESDB) shrugged off the possible impact of rising crude
oil prices to revise its gross domestic product (GDP) forecast
for 2002 to 4.0-4.5 percent compared with the previous estimate
of 3.5-4.0 percent.
Singapore
corners 65% of ASEAN's FDI
Singapore took in 65 percent of
the $13 billion of foreign direct investment (FDI) in Southeast
Asia last year, trade minister George Yeo said recently.
The Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) secretariat recently announced FDI in the 10
member regional bloc rose by 13.4 percent to $13.06 billion
in 2001.
The Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) secretariat recently announced FDI in the 10
member regional bloc rose by 13.4 percent to $13.06 billion
in 2001.
Speaking in parliament, Yeo said:
"Singapore attracted $8.6 billion or 65 percent of the total
FDI into ASEAN."
There was no breakdown on where
the rest of the investments went, but there have been concerns
in ASEAN that the group’s newer and less prosperious members
are missing out on the FDI inflows, prompting calls to narrow
the development gap.
ASEAN groups 10 nations ranging
from Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar and Vietnam to high-tech Singaproe,
oil-rich Brunei and other more development member Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand.
The first four countries are relatively
newer members of ASEAN, which has also been losing out investments
to emerging power house China. Yeo said fixed asset investments
in Singapore’s key manufacturing sector totaled $5.12 billion
last year, with a further 1.8 billion last year, with a further
1.8 billion in services sector.