BEIJING - Though latest figures indicate China's economy might have lost some steam into the close of 2013, most economists are optimistic over the country's growth momentum in 2014, with consensus that the economy will expand by about 7.5 percent.
They have also warned against risks related to industrial overcapacity, shadow banking and shadow credit expansion, local government debt, high interbank lending rates and financial liberalization.
The next 12 months will be "a year with hopes and challenges" for China, according to a report by a research team with the Bank of America Merrill Lynch led by chief China economist Lu Ting.
"In 2014, inflation will be slightly higher but remain tamed at 3.1 percent, and growth could be more stable on improved macro management of Beijing, albeit down slightly to 7.6 percent," Lu said in the report.
"We don't expect a hard landing in growth, a systematic financial crisis or nationwide debt crisis," he added.
Lu predicted that several themes will dominate the Chinese economy and its financial markets in 2014 - a more confident leadership, bottom-up interest rate liberalization to bring revolutionary changes, a cleanup of mounting local government and corporate debts, and China being affected by a robust growth rebound in the United States as well as the Federal Reserve's QE tapering.
The Bank of America Merrill Lynch report forecast that China's GDP growth might moderate from 7.7 percent in 2013 to 7.6 percent in 2014. Sequential quarter-on-quarter GDP growth could be in a small range of 1.8 percent to 2.0 percent in the whole of 2014.
"Our 7.6-percent growth forecast for 2014 is right in the middle of a wide spectrum of Street forecasts," according to the report.
For optimists, or "bulls," who predict growth of above 8.0 percent, they believe the recovering US and European economies will greatly quicken China's exports. Meanwhile, those "bears" who expect below 7.0-percent growth believe reforms such as reducing local government debt, cutting overcapacities and curbing shadow banking will significantly slow growth, Lu said.
He explained, "We are not as bullish on China's external demand as we expect a strong Renminbi, rising labor costs, and weak emerging markets will continue to weigh on China's exports.
"We are not as bearish because we believe shadow banking is not that scary, and deleveraging of local governments will be gently balanced by leveraging up the central government and restarting IPOs."
HSBC chief China economist Qu Hongbin was also relatively optimistic over China's growth prospects, projecting a 7.4-percent growth for the world's second-largest economy in 2014.
"We see a bigger upside than downside risk in our 2014 forecast," he said in a report.
The risks to the forecast may tilt to the upside, if external demand turns out to be better than expected and property investments remain strong due to softer-than-expected measures to cool the real estate market, he said.
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