无码中文字幕一Av王,91亚洲精品无码,日韩人妻有码精品专区,911亚洲精选国产青草衣衣衣

Specials

Top 10 economic numbers

By Song Jingli (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2010-12-24 17:48
Large Medium Small

Editor's note: You may think statistics are dull. But some may attract you the first moment you see or hear about them. A single number may not tell the whole story, but there is a story behind it, for sure.

[Click for more "top 10" topics]

Top 10 economic numbers

5.1%

Everybody in China may have felt the price hikes in all kinds of goods. The acronym CPI is now one of the best known economic terms.

Top 10 economic numbers

China's CPI (Consumer Price Index), a major gauge of inflation, rose to a 28-month high of 5.1 percent in November, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Dec 11.

The growth rate picked up from 4.4 percent in October, according to the NBS. The inflation was driven by an 11.7 percent of surge in food prices, which accounts for one third of the basket of goods used to calculate China's CPI. [Full Story]

More stories:                                                                        Special coverage: 

Top 10 economic numbers Inflation, prices top list of public concerns                                  Top 10 economic numbers Counter inflation
Top 10 economic numbers People's satisfaction with prices at 11-year low
Top 10 economic numbers Inflation expectation presses for rate hike
Top 10 economic numbers China cracks 38,000 illegal price-fixing cases in first 11 months

$7.24 billion

Trade deficits are rare for China. But it did come, albeit only once this year.

Top 10 economic numbers

China's trade balance turned red in March, the country's first monthly trade deficit in six years, the General Administration of Customs said on April 10.

China exported $112.11 billion of goods and services in March, up 24.3 percent year on year, while the imports surged 66 percent year on year to $119.35 billion, resulting in a trade deficit of $7.24 billion. [Full Story]

More stories:                                                                         Special coverage:

Top 10 economic numbers China to increase coal imports from Russia                                 Top 10 economic numbers 'Made in China' - but for how long?
Top 10 economic numbers Little Christmas cheer for factories                                              Top 10 economic numbers  Reforming our mode of growth
Top 10 economic numbers China expects exports to slow in 2011                 

12.8%

It may be a dream for people in China to own a house or apartment. But climbing prices have shattered many dreams. The number 12.8 percent in April shows that the growth rate for housing prices peaked in that month. Since then, housing prices have been rising at a slower pace.

Top 10 economic numbers
Housing prices rose 12.8 percent in April from a year earlier in China's 70 large and medium-sized cities, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Tuesday. That was 1.1 percentage points higher than March's housing price rise. [Full Story]

More Stories:                                                                    Special coverage:
Top 10 economic numbers Don't bury love under concrete                                              Top 10 economic numbers  China's Real Estate Curbs
Top 10 economic numbers  Housing price data reform to take effect                                Top 10 economic numbers China mulls levying property tax
Top 10 economic numbers  Beijing nets $22.8b in land sales this year                            Top 10 economic numbers  Dreaming of their own homes
Top 10 economic numbers  Real estate should not be pillar industry                               Top 10 economic numbers  The high price of saying 'I Do'
Top 10 economic numbers Rogue developers to be blacklisted                                       Top 10 economic numbers  Top 10 ways of 'living small'

 

$1426.08 an ounce

You may want to buy gold to counter inflation, or you may just want to buy a gold necklace for your mother, but gold may have become too expensive.

China's investment-driven consumption of gold will almost double this year to 45 billion yuan ($6.7 billion), due to growing concern over inflation and restrictions on property investment, the World Gold Council (WGC) said on Thursday.

"We expect investment-oriented consumption of gold could reach 150 tons in China this year, up from 80.5 tons during the same period last year," Albert Cheng, managing director of WGC (Far East), told China Daily. [Full Story]

More Stories:                                                                     Special Coverage:

Top 10 economic numbers  Chinese consumers rush for gold                                          Top 10 economic numbers New ways to make easy money in China
Top 10 economic numbers Gold shines as investors hunt for a safe haven
Top 10 economic numbers China approves first gold fund as demand rises

6.8275

The exchange rate for China's currency renminbi against the US dollar stayed at 6.8275 for a long time. But that was not the case anymore.

Top 10 economic numbers
 

The People's Bank of China, China's central bank, has decided to proceed further with the reform of the renminbi exchange rate regime to enhance the RMB exchange rate flexibility, a spokesperson of the central bank said on June 19.

The decision was made in view of the recent economic situation and financial market developments at home and abroad, and the balance of payments (BOP) situation in China, the spokesperson said in a statement. [Full Story]

More Stories:                                                                        Special Coverage:

Top 10 economic numbers   How costs stole Christmas                                                     Top 10 economic numbers  Hot money: a burning issue in China
Top 10 economic numbers   Clamor for yuan appreciation unwarranted                                Top 10 economic numbers  China Advances Yuan Rate Reform

5.16%

Stocks rise and fall, which is the normal state of the equities market. But the drop of shares by 5.16 percent in a single day may put a big dent in "your pocket."

Top 10 economic numbers
Chinese shares plummeted the most since Aug 31, 2009, on Nov 12, as investors feared more interest rate raise after inflation hit 25 month high in October.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index lost 5.16 percent, or 162.31 points, to 2,985.44. [Full Story]
More Stories:
Top 10 economic numbers   Stocks decline for second day
Top 10 economic numbers   Chinese shares close lower Thursday
Top 10 economic numbers   Equities head south on fuel price increase

 

$2.65 trillion

Management of China's colossal foreign exchange reserves can be a challenge.

Top 10 economic numbers


China's foreign exchange reserves, the world's largest, rose $194 billion in the third quarter to reach a record $2.65 trillion, which some foreign countries will likely use to pressure China to push forward a faster yuan appreciation, economists have said. [Full Story]

More Stories:
 Top 10 economic numbers  China's funds outstanding for forex hits 20t yuan
 Top 10 economic numbers  Forex regulator vows crackdown on 'hot money' inflows

No 1

China is on its way to getting more No 1s in the 21st century. It's now No 1 in the Emerging Markets Opportunity Index.

Top 10 economic numbers

A customer leaves an Ikea store in Shenyang, Liaoning province. China ranks No 1 among 27 emerging economies due to its huge consumer market and rapid economic growth, according to Grant Thornton. [Doug Kanter / Bloomberg] 


China ranks No 1 among 27 emerging economies due to its huge consumer market and rapid economic growth, according to the Emerging Markets Opportunity Index released by US accounting firm Grant Thornton.

The index takes account of key factors such as the size of the economy, wealth, involvement in world trade, growth potential and levels of human development. [Full Story]

More Stories:

 Top 10 economic numbers   China again retailers' favorite

No 2

China's GDP in the second quarter of this year exceeded Japan's, overtaking the No 2 spot held by Japan for more than 40 years.

Top 10 economic numbers


China's economy again beat Japan's in the third quarter of this year.

China's nominal GDP amounted to $1.42 trillion during July to September, compared with Japan's $1.37 trillion. [Full Story]

More Stories:                                                      Special Coverage:

Top 10 economic numbers  GDP ranking no reason to celebrate                      Top 10 economic numbers  China passes Japan in Q2 as 2nd largest economy
Top 10 economic numbers  China's GDP grows 8.7% in 2009                          Top 10 economic numbers  China Economy by Numbers - Nov

2,000 cars

"If the average life expectancy of Chinese is 70, Beijingers actually only get 50 years because we waste 20 in traffic jams." Just imagine what it's like when every day 2,000 more cars are hitting the road.

Top 10 economic numbers

Commuters wait nose to tail on the Third Ring Road in Beijing during rush hour last weekend. Traffic congestion in many cities has severely worsened in the last few decades, with more cars adding to the problem every day. [Wang Jing / China Daily] 

Take a sneak peek at a Christmas list drawn up by any Beijinger and chances are it includes a new car - or, to be precise, a new license plate.

People have been desperate to get their hands on this year's festive "must-have" since the announcement of plans to restrict vehicle purchase and registration in the capital from Jan 1. [Full Story]

More Stories:                                                                   Special Coverage:

Top 10 economic numbers  Rules may steer auto sector out                                         Top 10 economic numbers China's EV industry leaps forward
Top 10 economic numbers   Beijing unveils measures to ease traffic flow                         Top 10 economic numbers Beijing Auto Show 2010