China's growth holds steady at 6.7pc

China's economic growth held steady in the quarter ending in September as trade weakened but government spending rose.

China's economy has grown 6.7 per cent in the third quarter from a year earlier, steady from the previous quarter and in line with market expectations, as increased government spending and a property boom offset stubbornly weak exports.

Analysts polled by Reuters had predicted gross domestic product would grow 6.7 per cent in the July-September period, unchanged from the second quarter and the first quarter.

While fears of a hard landing have eased this year, recent data also have highlighted growing imbalances in the world's second-largest economy, with growth increasingly dependent on government spending and ballooning debt as private investment tumbles to record lows.

The high-flying property market is also beginning to show signs of overheating.

Gross domestic product rose 1.8 per cent quarter-on-quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Wednesday, in line with market forecasts and compared with revised 1.9 per cent quarterly growth in the second quarter.

The government has set a growth target of 6.5-7 per cent for the full year. The economy expanded 6.9 per cent in 2015, the slowest pace in a quarter of a century.

The statistics bureau said in a statement that many uncertain factors in the economy remain and that the foundation for sustained growth is not solid.


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Source: AAP



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