Zhejiang Provincial Statistical Bureau has released the latest
figures of economic development last year.
Agriculture grows steadily
The primary sector reported a steady growth last year in east
China's Zhejiang Province, with efficient, ecological agriculture
gaining momentum.
According to the provincial statistical bureau, the primary
sector, involving agriculture, forestry, animal husbandry and
fishery, realized 87.3 billion yuan (US$10.8 billion) in
value-added output last year, up 1.6 percent from the previous
year.
A total of 2.8 million hectares of farmland were sown to crops
in Zhejiang last year, 2.1 percent more than the year-earlier
level. The total included 1.5 million hectares sown to grain, up
3.9 percent, the bureau said.
However, Zhejiang's grain output went down 2.4 percent
year-on-year to 8.15 million tons.
Last year the province turned out 1.65 million tons of meat
products, up 2.2 percent; and 4.8 million tons of aquatic products,
down 2.7 percent.
Double-digit growth in secondary industry
The secondary sector of the province realized 714.7 billion yuan
(US$88.1 billion) in value-added output last year, a year-on-year
growth of 12.3 percent.
The total included 490.5 billion yuan in value added output
generated by major industrial enterprises in the province, up 18.1
percent.
The growth was driven up mainly by textile, clothing, furniture,
arts and crafts, lumber processing, oil refining, chemical,
pharmaceutical, plastics and transport equipment manufacturing
enterprises.
Last year, all industrial enterprises in the province reported
187.8 billion yuan in pre-tax and profits, including 107.3 billion
yuan in net profits, up 13.4 percent and 11.6 percent
respectively.
Meanwhile, last year also saw the hi-tech sector's gross
industrial output amount to 170.6 billion yuan in the province, up
22.3 percent over the year-earlier level.
Tertiary industry grows 15%
The tertiary industry witnessed a stable expansion last year,
with modern logistics, financial, property development, tourism and
information service developing into new growth areas.
The provincial statistical bureau said that Zhejiang's tertiary
industry realized 534.5 billion yuan (US$65.9 billion) in
value-added output in 2005, up 14.9 percent over the year-earlier
level. The growth rate was 2.5 percentage points higher than the
province's GDP growth.
Last year saw the business turnover of post and
telecommunications services increase by 24.8 percent to 83.5
billion yuan, the bureau added.
Sales of housing amounted to 108.3 billion yuan, up 24.7
percent.
Zhejiang's tourism income stood at 137.9 billion yuan last year,
up 23.1 percent, according to the bureau.
20% growth in capital construction
investment
Zhejiang Province pumped 665.2 billion yuan (US$82 billion) in
fixed assets last year, a year-on-year growth of 15.1 percent.
According to the provincial statistical bureau, of the total
200.5 billion yuan went to capital construction projects, up 20
percent; and 238.6 billion yuan to the manufacturing sector, up
21.6 percent.
In the manufacturing sector, four categories, namely chemical,
tobacco, nonferrous metal and instruments and meters enterprises,
each reported a 50 percent growth in fixed-assets investment, the
bureau said.
Last year also witnessed 145.5 billion yuan invested in real
estate development in Zhejiang, 12.3 percent more than the
year-earlier level, the bureau added.
Consumer goods market brisk
The province recorded 463.2 billion yuan (US$57.1 billion) in
retail sales last year, a growth of 14.2 percent year-on-year.
Allowing for price rises, the real-term growth was 13.2 percent,
up 0.7 percentage points from the previous-year level, said the
provincial statistical bureau.
Retail sales of food, garments, daily necessities and sports and
recreational articles went up 19.7 percent, 23.9 percent, 17.5
percent and 28.5 percent respectively.
Last year urbanites in Zhejiang spent 12,254 yuan per capita on
consumer goods, while rural dwellers spent 5,215 yuan per capita
for the same purpose, up 15.2 percent and 11.9 percent
respectively.
The bureau said the growth rates would be revised to 13.5
percent and 10.2 percent respectively allowing for price rises.
In a related development, Zhejiang's consumer price index, or
CPI, went up 1.3 percent last year, yet the growth rate was 2.6
percentage points lower than the year-earlier level.
Energy consumption decreases
Zhejiang Province managed to reduce its energy consumption last
year.
In 2005 Zhejiang's energy consumption for every 10,000 yuan of
GDP stood at an equivalent to 0.78 tons of standard coal, 1.3
percent less than the previous year.
Major energy-gobbling enterprises had their energy consumption
per 10,000 yuan of gross industrial output reduce 9.7 percent from
0.5 tons to 0.45 tons of standard coal.
Reduction of energy consumption has become one of the greatest
concerns of the Chinese government. In the coming 15 years, the
country plans to decrease energy consumption per GDP unit by 20
percent from the current level of 2.6 tons of standard coal.
In a related development, financial input in scientific and
technological research made up 2.3 percent of Zhejiang's GDP last
year, up two percentage points from the year-earlier level of 2.1
percent, the local statistical bureau said.
Major industrial enterprises each with an annual sales volume of
more than five million yuan (US$616,522) spent 14.5 billion yuan
(US$1.8 billion) on research and development and 1.19 billion yuan
(US$146.7 million) buying tech results, up 43.3 percent and 23.5
percent respectively.
Residents' income continues to increase
The per-capita disposable income of urbanites reached 16,294
yuan (US$2,009) last year, a year-on-year increment of 12
percent.
Allowing for price rises, the real-term growth was 10.4 percent,
said the provincial bureau of statistics.
Last year, the per-capita pure income of rural residents in
Zhejiang stood at 6,660 yuan, up 9.3 percent year-on-year.
The growth rate was revised to 6.4 percent after deducting price
factors, the bureau said.
Residents in both urban and rural areas had their combined
outstanding savings deposits reach 912.3 billion yuan (US$112.5
billion) at the end of last year, up 17.8 percent from the
year-earlier level.
In a related development, the per-capita living space increased
by 2.2 square meters to 26.1 square meters for urban citizens in
Zhejiang and rose 3.7 square meters to 55 square meters for rural
dwellers.
(Xinhua News Agency February 5, 2006)