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Xi says China can maintain ‘medium-high growth’, WSJ says

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping said the nation’s reforms won’t be derailed by signs of economic weakness, and that the government is stepping up efforts to transform its model for growth.

Xi Jinping, China's president and Communist Party chief, addresses American students in Mandarin at the International Studies Learning Centre in South Gate, California, on Feb 17, 2012. Photo: AP

Xi Jinping, China's president and Communist Party chief, addresses American students in Mandarin at the International Studies Learning Centre in South Gate, California, on Feb 17, 2012. Photo: AP

BEIJING — Chinese President Xi Jinping said the nation’s reforms won’t be derailed by signs of economic weakness, and that the government is stepping up efforts to transform its model for growth.

“China has the capacity and is in the position to maintain a medium-high growth in the years to come,” Mr Xi told the Wall Street Journal, according to a written response to questions published today (Sept 22) ahead of his first state-visit to the US. “The Chinese economy is still operating within the proper range.”

Mr Xi said China will stick with its economic opening despite a slowdown, and “place greater emphasis on developing an innovation and consumption-driven economy”. He added that understanding the Chinese economy means taking the long view, and that foreign investors are still planning to increase or maintain their investment in China.

Mr Xi’s remarks aimed to buttress global confidence in his nation’s slowing economy after a stock market rout and surprise currency devaluation last month triggered a worldwide sell off in commodities, equities and emerging market currencies. China remained committed to opening its markets and completing a transition from export-driven growth to consumer driven expansion, Mr Xi said, even as he defended the government’s intervention to try to stem a US$5 trillion (S$7.06 trillion) slide in stock values.

“An important goal for China’s current economic reform is to enable the market to play the decisive role in resource allocation and make the government better play its role,” he told the Journal. “That means we need to make good use of both the invisible hand and the visible hand.”

ARROW SHOT

There was no reversing from the economic opening he said, comparing it to “an arrow shot that cannot be brought back”.

Mr Xi’s responses echo comments by other officials on the economic slowdown, stock-market plunge and currency devaluation. Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan and Premier Li Keqiang had made similar recent efforts to assuage concerns.

“We are stepping up efforts to shift our growth model, make structural adjustment and place greater emphasis on developing an innovation and consumption-driven economy,” Mr Xi said in the interview. “It is our hope that by solving these problems, China’s economy will transform itself and retain its robust dynamism for development.”

As part of the overhaul, Communist Party leaders said this month they plan to sell shares of some state-owned enterprises and consolidate others in the country’s largest overhaul of its bloated businesses since the late 1990s.

CYBER-ESPIONAGE

As he prepares for a summit meeting with US President Barack Obama, Mr Xi called for more Sino-US cooperation and addressed some of the thornier issues straining ties between the two countries such as cyber-espionage and its muscle flexing in asserting territorial claims in the South China Sea.

China takes cybersecurity “seriously”, Mr Xi said, and denied his country engages in “theft of commercial secrets in any form, nor does it encourage or support Chinese companies to engage in such practices in any way”.

“Cybertheft of commercial secrets and hacking attacks against government networks are both illegal; such acts are criminal offences and should be punished according to law and relevant international conventions. China and the United States share common concerns on cybersecurity. We are ready to strengthen cooperation with the US side on this issue.”

Mr Xi insisted that China’s land reclamation in the South China Sea, one of the world’s busiest shipping lanes, shouldn’t raise hackles as its claim to the territory “backed by historical and legal evidence”. Garrisons being constructed on its new islands will allow China to “better uphold navigation and safety in the South China Sea”, he said. China has never had any ambition to expand outside its territory, Mr Xi said.

“China has always pursued a defence policy that is defensive in nature and a military strategy featuring active defence,” he wrote in the responses to the Journal. “In strengthening our defence and military building, we are not going after some kind of military adventure. It never crosses our mind. China has no military base in Asia and stations no troops outside its borders.” BLOOMBERG

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