SHANGHAI.
CHINA’S retail sales for the Lunar New Year holiday surged 19 percent year-on-year in one of the biggest rises in a decade, signalling a surge in domestic consumption according to state media.
Shops and restaurants across the country rang up 404,5 billion yuan (US$61,3 billion) in sales, up nearly a fifth from the Chinese New Year period in 2010, the commerce ministry said in a statement.
“Despite the high inflation rate in 2010, the increase is still remarkable,” Lu Zheng-wei, chief economist at the Industrial Bank was quoted as telling the China Daily.
“It underscores the initial success of China’s transformation to develop its economy through domestic consumption.”
The growth mainly reflected consumers’ rising incomes, Lu said.
Growth in rural incomes last year outpaced urban areas for the first time in 13 years, according to official statistics.
The Lunar New Year, also known as the Spring Festival, is the most important holiday in the Chinese calendar — families are reunited and people splash out on food, tobacco and liquor.
The week-long holiday, which ended on Tuesday, is the only time that many of the country’s estimated 230 million migrant workers are able to visit home.
Restaurants in the eastern province of Shandong, Shaanxi in the north and Heilongjiang in the northeast saw revenues jump by more than 20 percent from last year, while Shanghai saw revenues rise fourfold, the ministry said.
“Expanding domestic spending will top the ministry’s agenda in 2011,” Yao Jian, a commerce ministry spokesman was quoted as telling the newspaper. — AFP.

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