Shanghai, one of China's economic engines, reported a good
economic performance in the first three quarters of this year.
Shanghai's gross domestic product, or GDP, amounted to 530.5
billion yuan (US$63.9 billion) for the nine-month period, up 14.2
percent year-on-year. The growth rate was 2.4 percentage points
higher than the year-earlier level, said Cai Xuchu, a municipal
statistical bureau spokesman at a press conference.
From January to September, major industrial enterprises in
Shanghai realized 251.3 billion yuan (US$30.3 billion) in
value-added output, up 23.2 percent from the same period of last
year, Cai said.
They garnered 998.5 billion yuan in sales income for the
period,up 30.3 percent over the same 2003 period. The total
included 77.2billion yuan (US$9.3 billion) in profits, up 33.5
percent, Cai added.
In the three-quarter period, fixed-assets investment stood at
231.25 billion yuan (US$27.9 billion), up 25.9 percent
year-on-year. The growth rate was 11.4 percentage points lower than
an overheated level for the first quarter this year. Most of the
money went to the manufacturing, property development and
construction sectors.
The city's retail sales increased by 11.4 percent year-on-year
to 182.4 billion yuan (US$21.97 billion), said Cai.
Foreign direct investment, or FDI, grew steadily in the city. A
total of US$9.2 billion entered the city in contracted foreign
capital between January and September, up 3.1 percent year-on-year.
About US$5.4 billion was actually used, up 19 percent.
Meanwhile, foreign trade in the city soared 49.9 percent from
the year-earlier level to 53.2 billion US dollars, according to Cai
Xuchu.
The city also recorded 86.1 billion yuan (US$10.37 billion) in
fiscal revenues for the nine-month period, up 26.5 percent, Cai
added.
(Xinhua News Agency October 25, 2004)