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BEIJING, April 2 (Xinhua) -- China's chief in the fight against corruption, He Guoqiang, Friday urged authorities to tap into the people to "form a joint effort to combat corruption and build clean governance.""Fighting corruption and building clean governance is a life-and-death issue for the Party and the state, which calls for concerted efforts of the whole of society and the people," said He, head of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, at a meeting in Beijing.He, also a member of the Standing Committee of the CPC Central Committee Political Bureau, said the discipline inspection and supervision authorities should set up more channels to hear public opinions and recommendations on fighting corruption and building clean governance."We should create a better environment to engage the people in fighting corruption and building clean governance," he said.He also called on the authorities to be more willing to subject themselves to public supervision and to be more approachable, trustworthy and respected.
BEIJING, April 13 (Xinhua) -- Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao met with his Mongolian counterpart Sukhbaataryn Batbold here Tuesday, pledging to boost trade cooperation and overall relations.Wen said the two countries were committed to promoting peace and stability in northeast Asia and cementing bilateral exchanges and cooperation in various areas.China persists in the building of good-neighborly relationships and partnerships with its neighbors, Wen said, calling on joint efforts with Mongolia to further strengthen bilateral ties and long-term friendship.Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R) meets with Mongolian Prime Minister Sukhbaataryn Batbold in Beijing, China, April 13, 2010. The two countries' economies were highly compatible, Wen said, calling on relevant departments to enhance coordination and support enterprises to expand cooperation and contribute to a new round of economic growth for both countries and the region as a whole.Batbold, who just finished his trip to the Boao Forum in south China's Hainan Province, said his current China visit was fruitful.High-level exchanges were pivotal to the growth of bilateral ties, Batbold said, adding his country expected a visit from Premier Wen at an early date.Mongolia hoped to enhance cooperation with China in the areas of trade, investment, agriculture, mining, finance and non-governmental exchanges, he added.

BEIJING, June 1 (Xinhua) -- China has promising growth prospects and should not be blamed for world imbalances, says Danny Quah, a renowned British economist."Emergency financing that was placed in the Chinese economy to counter the downturn from the 2008 global financial crisis was the right thing...The imbalances is a global problem, not a China problem," said Quah, a professor at the London School of Economics and Political Science.China did the right thing in infusing its economy with fiscal stimulus, Quah said in a recent interview with Xinhua.He also declined to describe the ballooning real estate prices as a bubble, pointing out "the strong fundamentals" of China's economy.He said the expansion of China's housing construction will be proved useful eventually, given the fact that "China is still engaging in the task of moving hundreds of millions of people from rural areas to urban China to continue to power its manufacturing and industrial progress.""So I would not describe it as a collapse of real estate bubble, we can look forward to a rationalization of housing and real estate prices," Quah said. "The improvement and expansion of housing stock will play an important role in continuing to move the Chinese economy forward.""I think Chinese fundamentals will continue to be strong. And a little bit of high inflation, as long as it doesn't break out into some kind of runaway high inflation, is probably no bad thing," he said. "We will get it under control again as the Chinese government did previously."On allegations that China deliberately keeps its currency RMB weak to obtain unfair advantages in trade with countries like the United States, Quah said people who draw such a false conclusion are misguided."The United States is running a trade deficit not just against China. It is running a trade deficit against almost 100 other countries," he said. "China is not unique in how it is exporting more to the United States than it's importing."The U.S. government was beginning to run a large trade deficit long before China's trade surpluses started grow, he added."If you take the ratio of China's bilateral trade surplus against the U.S. as a fraction of the U.S.' overall bilateral trade deficit against all of the countries, it has remained constant over the last 15, 20 years," Quah said.
BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) -- The goal of China's foreign trade policy in 2010 was to improve its trade balance while maintaining steady export growth, said the Ministry of Commerce (MOC) spokesman Thursday.The country's trade surplus was expected to shrink by another 100 billion U.S. dollars in 2010, said Yao Jian, the MOC spokesman, at a press conference.The statement came less than a week after the country posted its first monthly trade deficit for March in six years, which was valued at 7.24 billion U.S. dollars, according to the General Administration of Customs (GAC) last Saturday.The GAC said the March deficit mainly stemmed from shrinking exports of labor intensive products, surging imports volumes and rising commodity prices, and predicted the country's trade surplus might continue decrease for the rest of the year.Echoing the GAC, Yao said the country's foreign trade was likely to keep heading toward a more balanced state, while some experts predicted China's trade would soon return to surplus."The trade deficit registered in March demonstrated expanding domestic demand accompanied by lukewarm demand in the international market," Yao said."Because such a situation would continue, the monthly trade deficit seen in March would remain, at least in the first half of 2010," he said.The deficit also proved that, in an era of economic globalization, it was market supply and demand, and other factors that decided trade balance rather than exchange rates, said Yao.Yao portrayed the deficit in March as the continuation of a shrinking trade surplus that started to appear in 2008, and also as a result of the central government's macroeconomic policy in balancing the economy.In recent years, China has worked hard to restructure its economy away from excessive dependence on exports and the manufacturing sector, while a whole range of measures have been taken to expand domestic demand.The goal of China's foreign trade policy was to further balance trade while maintaining stable growth in exports, he said.Yao expected the ratio of China's trade surplus to its gross domestic product (GDP) to fall to 3 to 4 percent from last year's 5.7 percent.When an economy's ratio stays between 5 percent and minus 5 percent, its trade can be considered as more or less balanced, said Yao Jian, citing a commonly accepted standard adopted in the economics field.The conclusion coincides with another set of data provided by the GAC chief Sheng Guangzu in an exclusive interview with Xinhua on Wednesday.Sheng said the ratio of China's trade surplus to its total trade volume declined to 2.3 percent in the first quarter this year from more than 10 percent registered between 2006 and 2008."When the ratio is below 10 percent, it means the country's foreign trade can be deemed as balanced," said Sheng citing an international standard.Sheng also said that China never worked towards having a trade surplus and the country was committed to making its foreign trade more balanced.China's trade surplus would continue to shrink as a result of the country's efforts to restructure and balance its foreign trade, he said, echoing the views of Yao.
来源:资阳报