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From 1979 until 2010, China's average annual GDP growth was 9.91%, reaching a historical high of 15.2% in 1984 and a record low of 3.8% in 1990. Based on the current price, the country's average annual GDP growth in these 32 years was 15.8%, reaching an historical high of 36.41% in 1994 and a record low of 6.25% in 1999.
Per capita GDP exceeded US$10,000 for the first time in Beijing (US$10,402) and Shanghai (US$10,593) in 2009. Mainland China's per capita GDP (US$10,158) exceeded US$10,000 for the first time in the year of 2019, and 11 provinces including Beijing, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Fujian, Tianjin, Zhejiang, Guangdong, Hubei, Chongqing, Inner Mongolia and ...
On January 14, 2009, as confirmed by the World Bank [38] the NBS published the revised figures for 2007 financial year in which growth happened at 13 percent instead of 11.9 percent (provisional figures). China's gross domestic product stood at US$3.4 trillion while Germany's GDP was US$3.3 trillion for 2007.
China's was the only major world economy to experience GDP growth in 2020, when its GDP increased by 2.3%. [ 95] However, it posted one of its worst economic performances in decades because of COVID-19 in 2022. [ 96] In 2023, IMF predicted China to continue being one of the fastest growing major economies. [ 97]
List of 31 provincial-level administrative divisions in mainland China by Nominal GDP in 2023 (billions of GDP) [ 1] Average exchange rate in 2023: CNY 7.0467 per U.S. dollar [ 2] (PPP no longer included in the table for frequent changes in its index) Rank. Provinces.
Gross domestic product (GDP) grew 4.9% in July-September from the year earlier, data released by the National Bureau of Statistics showed, versus analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 4.4 ...
Shenzhen, in Guangdong province, is the third biggest Chinese city in GDP terms (US$482 billion) Chongqing is the city with the fourth highest GDP in China (US$433 billion) Guangzhou, in Guangdong province, is the fifth largest city in China in economic terms (US$429 billion)
China, for the last two millennia, was one of the world's largest and most advanced economies. [1] [2] [3] Economic historians usually divide China's history into three periods: the pre-imperial era before the rise of the Qin; the early imperial era from the Qin to the rise of the Song (221 BCE to 960 CE); and the late imperial era, from the ...