| Paulson warns China of future economic risks(AFP)Updated: 2006-10-13 13:17
 Washington - Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said that China is unlikely to 
overtake the United States as the world's largest economy, and in fact faces 
important "downside" risks. 
 
 
 
 
 |  Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, 
 seen here in September 2006, said that China is unlikely to overtake the 
 United States as the world's largest economy, and in fact faces important 
 "downside" risks. [AFP]
 |  China must accelerate reforms to rebalance its growth both for its own 
good and for that of the world economy, Paulson said in an interview with Fox 
News. 
 Asked if China, given its double-digit rates of growth, could surpass the 
United States as the world's pre-eminent economy, Paulson said past performance 
was no guarantee of the future. 
 Those who make that claim "look at the past and want to extrapolate future 
growth from the past and just assume that the economy will keep going up at the 
rate it has been growing and defy economic gravity," he said. 
 "They are assuming that somehow or other China will be immune from all of the 
economic issues and problems that confront the rest of the world. 
 "As the economy gets bigger and bigger and as they are part way from an 
economy which is centrally planned to one that is market driven, it is 
increasingly important that they move ahead quickly with their reforms. 
 "I think that there's more risk on the downside for China, although I am an 
optimist," Paulson said. 
 During a visit to China last month, the Treasury secretary inaugurated a 
high-level economic dialogue with Chinese leaders designed to thrash out the 
longer-termer challenges posed by the country's dramatic growth. 
 But more immediately, Paulson is under pressure from some in US Congress to 
get tough on China for trade imbalance. 
 His comments came on the day that new data showed the US trade deficit surged 
to US$69.9 billion in August, with Chinese imports accounting for the lion's 
share of the shortfall. |