China Growth Jumps to 10.7% for Q4
By wchung | 24 Mar, 2026
China’s economic growth accelerated to 10.7 percent in the final quarter of 2009, adding to pressure on Beijing to cool inflation pressures while keeping the country’s recovery on track.
The quarterly growth announced Thursday exceeded most forecasts and brought 2009’s expansion to 8.7 percent. The government had forecast 8.3 percent growth for the year.
China has rebounded strongly from the global downturn but the government worries that heavy stimulus spending and bank lending might fuel inflation. Regulators have ordered banks to control lending and analysts expect them to raise interest rates this year.
“At present, the base of the world economic recovery is relatively weak. There are uncertainties in domestic economic development,” Ma Jiantang, commissioner of the National Bureau of Statistics, said at a news conference. “We should … maintain consistency and stability of macroeconomic policy.”
Consumer prices fell through much of the year but the decline turned around in November and prices rose by 1.9 percent in December from a year earlier, Ma said.
China has led the recovery from the global financial and economic crisis, due partly to its 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) of stimulus spending.
1/20/2010 9:25 PM BEIJING (AP)
Articles
- Pakistan Offers to Host Actual Peace Talks—IRL
- Mandopop Legend Jay Chou to Release First Album in 4 Years
- Japan's Cherry Blossom Picnics Pinched by 25% Food Inflation Since 2020
- SK Hynix Places Record $8 Billion Order for ASML EUV Lithography Tools
- TSMC Capacity a Major Bottleneck for AI Buildout Says Broadcom
- BTS Army to Bring $5.3 Billion Spending Power to a City Near You
- Zoox to Expand Robotaxi Service into San Francisco and Las Vegas
- NYSE Partners with Securitize to Develop Tokenized Securities Platform
- World's 25 Most Polluted Cities All in India, Pakistan and China
- Flight Cancellations Spread Across Globe on Mideast Hub Closures
