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Averages incomes for city dwellers rose 11.5 percent in 2010 to 21,033 yuan (about $3,200). Rural per capita income surged nearly 15 percent, but at 5,919 yuan ($900) it lags far behind. Recent surges in costs for food and other basic necessities are hitting many families, especially those living on lower incomes. "My pension is just 1,700 yuan ($260) a month, and even if it has been raised a bit, it cannot catch up with rising prices," said Ji Minlin, a 62-year-old retired bicycle factory worker who said she and her friends were combing supermarkets for bargains. "I do hope prices, especially food prices, won't rise anymore," she said. Many analysts say authorities need to act more decisively to cool surging prices, especially as such pressures rise around the globe. Following news earlier this week that the country's biggest state-run commercial banks splashed out nearly 240 billion yuan ($36.4 billion) in new loans in the first 10 days of the new year, the banking regulator again ordered banks to tighten risk controls and reportedly is considering ways to penalize banks for flouting orders to cut back lending. With so much money sloshing around the economy, authorities have been hard put to get banks to rein in. Borrowing for real estate development and other projects is the lifeblood for the sales by local governments of land use rights that provide a huge share of their revenues. Such sales rose 70 percent in 2010, helping push property prices 6.4 percent higher compared with a year earlier. A huge pool of nonbank financing nearly doubled the amount of money available for investment last year, much of it "off balance sheet" lending whose exact scale is unknown. "Because of the property bubble, risk exists almost everywhere in China's fragile financial system," said Yi Xianrong, an economist at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' Finance Research Center.
[Associated
Press;
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