Oil Price Hike Not to Damage China's Economic Recovery

The recent oil price hike poses a real threat to China's economic recovery, yet it is not threatening enough to spoil it.

"The oil price shocks could weaken, but not derail China's nascent, broadly based economic recovery," said Guonan Ma, head of North Asia economics of Merrill Lynch.

China's August exports and imports rose 27.2 percent and a staggering 54.7 percent year-on-year, respectively, compared to 24 percent and 40 percent in July.

In fact, import growth in August reached a five-year high, surging beyond expectations. As a result, the country's monthly trade surplus shrank by half compared to 12 months ago.

Experts pointed out that while the budding strength in domestic demand and rapid technology upgrading of China play a positive role in the country's economic growth, a much larger oil import bill caused both by higher oil price and rising oil consumption pose a real threat to China's economic recovery.

World oil prices have shot up 250 percent from a low of around US$10 per barrel in early 1999 to a recent high of nearly US$35 per barrel.

China has been a net oil importer since the 1990s, and its oil imports have increased since 1998, mainly because of stagnant domestic oil production and rising domestic oil consumption.

Ma predicted that China's net oil import bill could double this year, and could rise further to US$15 billion in 2001, if the oil price remained at the level of US$33 per barrel.

However, the direct impact of any oil price hikes on China's economy should be much less than that on most Asia-Pacific economies as the ratio of net oil imports to domestic oil consumption is much lower than the Asian average.

The ratio for China is only 22 percent, but 100.2 percent for Japan and 61.4 percent for the rest of Asia-Pacific.

Second, oil occupies only 26.6 percent in China's primary energy consumption, much lower than several other Asian economies, which are heavily dependent on oil, including Singapore, the Philippines, Taiwan and Hong Kong, thus decisively offsetting the effect that higher oil prices could hamper the Chinese economy.

China's economic recovery is still broadening and the 2001 macro story for China will likely be the strength of domestic demand, according to Ma.

Merrill Lynch estimated that, with the oil price at US$33 per barrel, the estimated accumulative direct and indirect impact on China should be no more than 0.5 percent of the GDP.

It maintains its bullish macro call on China and maintains its baseline GDP forecasts of 8 percent and 7.5 percent respectively for 2000 and 2001, in its report on China economics released on September 18.

(Xinhua 09/30/2000)



In This Series

China to Import More Oil

Domestic Fuel Price Rise Announced

References

Archive

Web Link

主站蜘蛛池模板: 好男人电影直播在线观看| 欧美一级做一级爱a做片性| 四虎国产精品高清在线观看| 麻豆天美精东果冻星空| 国产精品反差婊在线观看 | 四虎成人影院网址| 青青草a国产免费观看| 国产真实伦在线观看| 2021在线观看视频精品免费| 在线黄视频网站| 免费黄色软件在线观看| 蕾丝av无码专区在线观看| 国产护士一级毛片高清| 窝窝视频成人影院午夜在线| 国产裸拍裸体视频在线观看| 99精品在线免费观看| 好男人好资源在线影视官网 | 一级特黄aaa大片在线观看| 日日摸日日碰夜夜爽亚洲| 久久精品成人一区二区三区| 最近2018中文字幕2019高清| 亚洲人成人77777网站不卡| 欧美换爱交换乱理伦片老| 亚洲精品成人a在线观看| 狠狠97人人婷婷五月| 免看**毛片一片成人不卡| 精品一区二区三区视频| 制服丝袜一区二区三区| 精品欧美同性videosbest| 喝丰满女医生奶水电影| 老司机67194精品线观看| 国产一区二区三区在线观看视频| 阿娇囗交全套高清视频| 国产午夜福利100集发布| 香蕉视频在线观看网站| 国产女人aaa级久久久级| 黄床大片30分钟免费看| 国产婷婷一区二区三区| 高清国产av一区二区三区| 国产在线观看麻豆91精品免费| 麻豆高清区在线|