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On Wednesday, China's top leaders signaled their own concerns over imbalances in the economy, with the State Council saying policy will shift to dealing with waste and other problems of high growth. "In the first three quarters, the pace of economic growth quickened," the State Council said in a statement after a meeting with Premier Wen Jiabao. "At the same time, we also are clearly aware that there are still difficulties and problems in the economic and social development of our country." The focus in the next few months will be on curbing industrial overcapacity, promote new industries, maintain liquidity and lower unemployment, it said. While they have ordered curbs on bank lending to some industries, China's planners are not facing any pressure from inflation: despite surging share and property prices, the consumer price index fell 1.1 percent in January-September from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said. The worry is that wasteful and redundant spending on new factories and unneeded construction will worsen gluts of some products, while inviting financial problems as projects fail to pay off. Li, the statistics spokesman, acknowledged the concerns, but noted that domestic consumption such as consumer spending accounts for a growing share of growth. Emblematic of the rise in consumer spending: China's auto market has surged ahead to become the world's biggest, with sales up 34 percent to 9.66 million vehicles in the first nine months of the year. The streets of Shanghai, the financial capital, are full of shoppers, its restaurants busy as ever. Retail sales growth was 15.1 percent in the first three quarters, the bureau said. "The Chinese are the biggest customers for many countries around the world," said David Cohen, director of Asian economic forecasting for consultancy Action Economics. "They matter like never before," he said.
[Associated
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