So predicts Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew of Singapore.
The Singapore Business Times reported on 30 December that it has just been over 30 years since China first adopted an open-door policy which puts it on its way to becoming the world's second largest economy soon. To Lee, becoming a world superpower will take more time.
Why? Making this point was Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew, who said that it would take more than another 30 years to “train and educate a whole generation” in a wide spectrum of specialties.
“Yes, China will have a big gross domestic product, but the GDP per capita is still about a third of that in America. China has got very poor provinces,' said Mr Lee at a dinner dialogue yesterday held in conjunction with Business China's second anniversary celebrations. “For the coastal areas, they will be as good if not better than Singapore. There will be big infrastructures and investments, good education. Some of the Chinese are already very confident and assertive.”
Business China, launched in November 2007 by Lee and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, is an initiative by the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce & Industry. The organisation helps encourage businessmen to better understand the language, culture, and social and economic conditions of modern-day China.
Singapore's relationship with China was one that came about 'by accident', said Lee. “If Deng Xiaoping had not come here that year, the relationship would not have developed. He saw what we were doing in Singapore and he was taken up by our society — clean, safe, everyone owns their own homes,” he said. “He visited some of the flats, and saw how we made use of capitalism to build a fair society. That set into his mind that he could do the same (for China).”
The Chinese has once again proven,with will of steel,they can take all the odds to move forward. Their vision is laser-sharp!
Do our leaders in Malaysia have such awill? Sadly we can't even focus!
December 29, 2009
Seoul: A 5% Growth Rate in 2010
South Korea's economy is geared for positive advance in 2010. so says a Reuters report released today(30 December 2009.
It will probably grow by more than 5 per cent next year on the back of the successful effect of the government’s stimulus spending, says President Lee Myung-bak.
This is above the Ministry of Strategy and Finance’s official target of 5 per cent gross domestic product growth next year announced this month, and far higher than the central bank’s forecast of a 4.6 percent gain.
South Korea apparently has overcome the crisis ahead of other countries and international organizations' forecast that the economy would grow by about 4 per cent next year.
A statement from the presidential office, the Blue House, quoted Lee as making the remarks during a meeting to review public construction work projects due for next year.
The central bank estimated this month Asia’s fourth-largest economy would grow by 0.2 per cent this year, far better than earlier expectations for a steep decline, given the positive effects of a massive stimulus spending and monetary easing by the authorities.
Underlining the optimism, the central bank said early on Wednesday a key index measuring how local manufacturers assess their business outlook for January 2010 hit a two-year high of a seasonally adjusted 93, up from 86 in December.
South Korea’s economy derives more than half of its annual output from domestic service industries but exports of manufactured goods, ranging from cars and mobile phones to chips and ships, still play a critical role.
The upbeat economic prospects have prompted investors to bet the country’s central bank would start to raise interest rates early next year to prevent extra-low credit costs from fanning asset price bubbles and broader inflation.
The Bank of Korea held the benchmark 7-day repurchase agreement rate steady at record-low 2.0 per cent for the past 10 consecutive months after six cuts totalling 3.25 percentage points. It will next review the rate on Jan. 8.
Bond investors shrugged off the central bank data and Lee’s remarks, while awaiting more important industrial production data due to be released later in the day.
Analysts surveyed by Reuters this week forecast South Korea’s industrial output index would rebound by a seasonally adjusted 2.3 per cent in November over a month earlier after an unexpected 3.8 percent fall in October.
It will probably grow by more than 5 per cent next year on the back of the successful effect of the government’s stimulus spending, says President Lee Myung-bak.
This is above the Ministry of Strategy and Finance’s official target of 5 per cent gross domestic product growth next year announced this month, and far higher than the central bank’s forecast of a 4.6 percent gain.
South Korea apparently has overcome the crisis ahead of other countries and international organizations' forecast that the economy would grow by about 4 per cent next year.
A statement from the presidential office, the Blue House, quoted Lee as making the remarks during a meeting to review public construction work projects due for next year.
The central bank estimated this month Asia’s fourth-largest economy would grow by 0.2 per cent this year, far better than earlier expectations for a steep decline, given the positive effects of a massive stimulus spending and monetary easing by the authorities.
Underlining the optimism, the central bank said early on Wednesday a key index measuring how local manufacturers assess their business outlook for January 2010 hit a two-year high of a seasonally adjusted 93, up from 86 in December.
South Korea’s economy derives more than half of its annual output from domestic service industries but exports of manufactured goods, ranging from cars and mobile phones to chips and ships, still play a critical role.
The upbeat economic prospects have prompted investors to bet the country’s central bank would start to raise interest rates early next year to prevent extra-low credit costs from fanning asset price bubbles and broader inflation.
The Bank of Korea held the benchmark 7-day repurchase agreement rate steady at record-low 2.0 per cent for the past 10 consecutive months after six cuts totalling 3.25 percentage points. It will next review the rate on Jan. 8.
Bond investors shrugged off the central bank data and Lee’s remarks, while awaiting more important industrial production data due to be released later in the day.
Analysts surveyed by Reuters this week forecast South Korea’s industrial output index would rebound by a seasonally adjusted 2.3 per cent in November over a month earlier after an unexpected 3.8 percent fall in October.
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