China's gross domestic product is likely to rise about 9% in 2011, showing a slow-down from an estimated growth of 10% this year, a senior researcher at a government think tank said in remarks published on Sunday.
Liu Shijin, a deputy director of the Development Research Centre under the State Council, the cabinet, said China's economy would slow to a moderate pace in the coming three to five years, citing challenges from rising labour costs, excess liquidity and difficulty in finding a new source of growth.
China's economy grew 10.3 percent in the second quarter of this year after a rise of 11.9 percent in the first quarter, in what the government described as an expected moderation resulting from targeted structural adjustment.
But Liu sounded an optimistic note on the slowing pace of economic growth.
"Actually, we don't have to be too worried about an economy with moderate expansion," the official Xinhua News Agency quoted him as saying at a forum.
"Because the current economic growth is too high for China."
Liu warned that the easing monetary policy taken by the Federal Reserve would further weigh down the dollar and put pressure on other non-dollar currencies, including the yuan, to appreciate in the future.
Rich economies are introducing a fresh round of quantitative easing, fuelling speculation that rampant liquidity could be channelled to emerging markets.
He added that China's economic stimulus package also injected excessive liquidity into the market, pushing up prices of commodities, equities and other land-related assets or resources.
China's exports and investments would be much better in 2011 than this year, but the growth rate of consumption would pull back slightly from this year's boom, Liu added.
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