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Chinese economy not headed for 'hard landing': Top economic planner

However, he mentioned that uncertainty and global instability remain a risk to China's growth.

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With China fixing 6.5% to 7% as its GDP target for this year, the Communist giant's top economic planner ruled out a "hard landing" for the world's second largest economy but said that uncertainty and global instability do pose a risk to growth.

The Chinese economy is so resilient with relatively strong abilities to resist risks, Xu Shaoshi, who heads the National Development and Reform Commission, the main planning body of China said on the sidelines of the annual parliamentary session.

"We are capable of keeping economic growth at rates within a reasonable range," Xu said. "We are confident of achieving that end."

In his work report, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang set the target 6.5% to 7% this year. Last year, the economy slipped below 7% to 6.9%, the lowest in 26 years casting doubts about whether China could revert to 7% in the near future due to continued slowdown in its main sectors of growth, coal, steel, manufacturing, structural adjustment and fragile global recovery.

Xu said China's economic growth remains relatively fast among world major economies. The 6.9% growth was hard won given the sluggish global recovery.

China accounted for a quarter of the world's economic growth in 2014, Xu was quoted as saying by state-run Xinhua news agency.

But China must not underestimate risks this year, he said, due to a slowly recovering world economy, dipping prices in bulk commodities and geopolitical risks.

Domestic situation, including slowing growth, dropping prices of industrial goods, and declining corporate profits and fiscal revenue, has called for high alert, he said.

The government has a broad enough tool kit for the economy, and is doing research to prepare more policy measures, he said.

"There was a rumour that China's stock and foreign exchange markets' turbulence in January contributed to the chaos in the United States and Europe," he said.

"China is unable to produce such a spillover," Xu said.

From February 8 - 12, big drops were witnessed in the US and European stock markets, as well as bulk commodities such as crude oil, but Chinese were celebrating Spring Festival while the financial markets were being closed, he said.

Unlike previous years when the investment was a major contributor to growth, consumption accounted for 66.4% and investment only 10%, he said.

Services, rather than agriculture and industry, now account for more than half of the GDP, he said. 

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