The Chinese economy will not witness a hard landing, Stephen Green, head of Greater China research at Standard Chartered Bank, said on Tuesday.
China is likely to have the world's largest economy by 2030 - surpassing the United States, according to the US National Intelligence Council.
Although a slew of improving economic indicators have suggested that the growth of the world's second-largest economy is back on track, no over-optimism is allowed because the foundation of such a recovery is not yet well-grounded, experts have warned.
Power consumption, a barometer of industrial activity, rallied in November to a 9 percent year-on-year increase, extending the acceleration to two months in a row and signaling a stabilizing industrial sector.
China is realizing the ever-increasing domestic consumption will be an important driving force for the country's economic growth.
China faces extraordinary inequality in its social distribution system, but the government still has adequate options to deal with the problem.
In what is being widely interpreted by analysts as a political signal, Xi Jinping conducted his first official trip as new Party chief to Guangdong, the southern province where China's market-oriented reforms were launched.
Due to its proximity to Hong Kong, Guangdong was chosen as the testing ground by Deng Xiaoping three decades ago for "reform and opening-up".
Chinese enterprises' net income and revenue growth for 2012 fell sharply due to the economic slowdown, Fitch Ratings said in a report.
According to Fitch's analysis, which is based on a sample portfolio of 40 Chinese corporations, their net income growth fell by 11 percent in 2012.
The portfolio can be broken down into 15 State-owned enterprises and 25 non-governmental businesses.
The opening-up of the capital account in China is expected to speed up gradually, as the economy returns to stable growth.
The Chinese economy will grow faster next year a growth rate of 8 percent amid policy continuity and stability, the UBS AG said.
The economic future of China is still very positive and the country will be one of the key driving forces behind world economic growth, according to Stephen Heathcote, executive director-markets at the UK's Association of Chartered Certified Accountants.
In China, Thomas Rabe, CEO of German media giant Bertelsmann SE & Co KGaA, prefers to be called by his Chinese name Han Tao.
The South Beauty chief Zhang Lan recently sparked a debate on the emigration of rich Chinese after she was found to possess a foreign passport.