China will not issue the statistical index assessing the "Green
GDP" in the near future, a Chinese government official said.
As most of the items used to assess green GDP are untradable, it
is difficult for those indices to be formulated, the China
Securities Journal quoted a senior official with the National
Bureau of Statistics (NBS) as saying.
For example, the environmental index is affected by regional
factors to a large extent, said the official, whose name is not
disclosed in the report.
In the 11th Five-Year Plan, the concept of "Green GDP" was
highly stressed. The program not only sets goals of curbing
pollution but also pledges to achieve economic development on an
environmentally-friendly basis.
The research for building a scientific green GDP assessing
framework is underway and is taking shape, said the official.
The NBS is designing the index in a way that takes into account
people's satisfaction with their life, the environment and society,
in contrast to a more traditional index that only evaluates
economic development.
China's Gini Index exceeds the international warning line of 0.4
mainly due to the large gap between the income of urban and rural
residents.
China's higher Gini Index should be calculated according to the
country's particular conditions. Calculated individually, the Gini
Index of the urban residents and the rural residents is still below
0.4, he said.
Gini Index is an index assessing the fairness level of the
income distribution of a country.
(Xinhua News Agency June 15, 2006)