Urban fixed asset investment up 30.3% (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-06-15 14:29
China reported Thursday a 30-percent- strong year-on-year growth of urban
fixed asset investment in the first five months of 2006, following the State
Council's warning to "firmly curb" the trend.
The total fixed asset
investment in urban areas amounted to 2,544.3 billion yuan (318 billion U.S.
dollars) during the January-May period, growing 30.3 percent from the same
period a year ago, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Thursday.
The statistics release came a day after the State Council, China's
cabinet, called for efforts to curb the fast growth in fixed asset investment at
its executive meeting.
The meeting chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao urged
all departments concerned to "strictly" control the approval of new construction
projects,reduce land supplies and cut back bank lending.
"The investment
is definitely overheating instead of cooling down as hoped," said Wang
Xiaoguang, an economist with the National Development and Reform
Commission.
Banks' impulse to lend and local governments' need to
maintain speedy economic growth are major factors causing the soaring
investment, Wang told Xinhua.
Figures released by the central bank
showed that China's new loans totaled 2.12 trillion yuan (264 billion US
dollars) in the first five months of the year, approaching the annual target of
2.5 trillion yuan.
During the same five months, the investment by local
governments surged by 31.3 percent year on year to 2,272.6 billion yuan, up 0.2
percentage points over the first four months, according to the NBS figures.
Meanwhile, investment by the central government also accelerated. The
growth rate climbed from 18.8 percent from the January-April period to 22.7
percent in the January-May period, reaching 271.8 billion yuan.
The NBS
report also said that investments in coal mining industry, power industry and
railway transport grew 63.9 percent, 18.4 percent and 93.8 percent respectively.
The investment in ferrous metal and non-ferrous metal went up 13.7 percent and
34.0 percent respectively.
The investment by mainland enterprises rose
31.6 percent while those by Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan-based companies and
foreign companies grew 16.0 percent and 22.4 percent year on
year. (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)
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