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Beijing's 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) plan to insulate the economy from the global recession with heavy spending on building highways and other public works helped boost investment in factory equipment and construction so far this year. Such investment rose 33 percent in January-August from a year earlier, to 11.298 trillion yuan ($1.65 trillion), despite an expected waning of bank lending following a massive surge in the first half of the year. New bank loans totaled 410.4 billion yuan ($60.1 billion), the central bank reported Friday, higher than estimated and well above the 355.9 billion yuan in new credit in July. Bank credit traditionally tapers off late in the year. But lending this year still remains way above normal, having soared to a record 7.1 trillion yuan ($1.1 trillion) in the first half. It reached 8.15 trillion yuan ($1.2 trillion) by the end of August, the People's Bank of China reported. Demand for China's exports appears to be recovering but still remains weak, government officials say. "We still have much hard work to do to attain China's goal of 8 percent growth for this year. Many challenges lie ahead," Li Xiaochao, the statistics bureau's spokesman, told reporters in Beijing at a monthly briefing on the economy. While it pushes ahead with its sweeping construction program, China is tinkering with its policy, aiming to keep growth strong while curbing excess investment in sectors burdened with overcapacity, such as steel, cement and some chemicals
-- a chronic problem.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This
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