BEIJING - Foreign direct investment (FDI) in China continued to fall in
September, the government said on Friday, owing to persistent weakness in the global
economy and a slowdown in China.
Investment from overseas declined
by 6.8 percent from a year earlier to US$8.43 billion last month, the commerce
ministry said.
The decline continued a downward
trend stretching back to November, with the exception of May, when FDI eked out
a marginal gain of 0.05 percent.
The government has blamed the
slump on the slowdown in global economic growth, the prolonged European debt
crisis and rising costs and weak demand at home.
For the first nine months of the
year, foreign firms invested US$83.4 billion in factories and other projects in
China, down 3.8 percent from the same period a year ago, the ministry said.
Investment by the 27-member
countries of the European Union fell 6.3 percent on year in the first nine months
of the year to US$4.83 billion, while that from the United States dipped 0.63
percent to US$2.37 billion, the ministry said.
Capital flows from 10 Asian
countries and regions including Hong Kong, Japan, the Philippines, Malaysia,
Singapore and South Korea also tumbled by 4.9 percent year-on-year in the
period to US$70.99 billion, it added.
Ministry spokesman Shen Danyang
said China was in an "adjustment stage" in terms of receiving foreign
funds but that the government remains optimistic about the country's long-term
appeal to overseas investors.
"We think the general trend
of FDI development in the country remains positive and healthy," he told
reporters at a briefing.
He added that there were
"positive changes" in the quality and structure of the use of foreign
capital, such as a rise in fund flows into less developed central China.
Data on Thursday showed the
world's second-largest economy has slowed for seven consecutive quarters,
expanding 7.4 percent in the three-month period ending on September 30, its
worst performance since the first quarter of 2009.
Exports, the key indicator of the
health of China's vital manufacturing sector, rose 9.9 percent in September on
year to a record monthly high, but analysts warned the performance was
unsustainable given the weak global outlook.
Shen downplayed hopes that the
export sector has yet bottomed out.
"Currently the trade
environment remains complicated and draconian and there are still many
difficulties in expanding foreign demand, so that it is too early to come to
the conclusion that China's foreign trade has recovered based on data for the
single month," he said.
"The most key target for the
full year at the moment is to try hard to maintain and improve our global
market share."
- AFP/xq/ir
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