China faces challenges from foreign investors (AP) Updated: 2006-01-26 15:32
China has become the third largest trading nation and the third largest
recipient of foreign investment, but its per capita income is still lower than
100th in the world, China's Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan, overseeing the five-year
plan, said in an address to the forum.
"The world economy is facing an increasing number of destabilizing and
uncertain factors -- fiercer international competition, rising trade
protectionism, an unfair economic order and a widening gap between the north and
the south," he said.
Zeng called for greater global cooperation to combat global poverty and
improve life for millions in China and around the globe.
"China cannot develop in isolation, nor can the world develop without China,"
he said.
In the new economic and social plan, Zeng said, China's first goal is to
double the per capita income in 2000 by 2010, achieve greater efficiency in
using resources and energy and curb ecological and environmental degradation.
Cheng said China's urban dwellers have become three times richer than their
rural counterparts, and people in the east and along the coast are much richer
than those in the west, so greater efforts must be made to narrow the gaps and
"keep economic progress synchronized with social progress."
At last year's forum, a key issue was when China would re-value its currency,
the yuan, and by how much. In July, it moved from a fixed rate against the U.S.
dollar to a slightly more flexible system. Since then, the yuan has appreciated
in value against the dollar by about 2.5 percent.
Victor Chu, chairman and chief executive of First Eastern Investment Group in
Hong Kong, said a 25 percent increase in the yuan's value was likely over the
next five years, but he hoped for a 30 percent appreciation -- and possibly 35
percent.
Chinese officials, however, were much more cautious.
"It's possible I would say, but (in) five years, the world changes too fast,"
Zhu said, cautioning that in the coming year the appreciation will be "very
small."
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