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Report projects 190-bln-USD trade surplus for 2007
China's listed companies recover 33.6 bln yuan of misappropriated funds
Rising temperatures threaten China's food output
ICBC launches foray into Indonesian banking
CITIC gets Kazakhstan oil assets for 1.91 bln USD
Foreign banks' share limit in Chinese banks remains at 25 pct
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China CITIC Bank becomes a joint-stock company
Report projects 190-bln-USD trade surplus for 2007
Market-determined interest rate mechanism to start operation
China's foreign trade to top 1.75 trillion USD in 2006
China's A-share market growth tops world in 2006
More foreign-funded companies in Shanghai to set up trade unions in 2007
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China's refined oil price still lower than int'l market
Shanghai-Beijing railway delayed while costs surge
Best Buy has "soft opening" in Shanghai
China to start issuing e-passports for HK residents
More than 77 pct Chinese mobile users sure to buy 3G handsets
Net profit of ICBC expected to grow 26 pct this year
 
Beijing's per capita GDP exceeds 6,000 U.S.dollars
BEIJING, Jan. 7 (Xinhua) -- Beijing's per capita gross domestic product (GDP) exceeded 6,000 U.S. dollars in 2006, according to statistics released by the capital's development and reform meeting on January 5.

Chai Xiaozhong, deputy director of the Beijing Municipal Development and Reform Commission, said that the city's GDP rose 11 percent in 2006, the eighth straight year Beijing has had double-digit economic growth.

Despite the good performance of Beijing's economy, Chai said the city faces many challenges, particularly the widening income gap between the city's urban and rural residents.

The per capita annual disposable income of urban residents is estimated to be more than 20,000 yuan, an increase of 12 percent over last year, while the per capita net income of farmers living in the outskirts of Beijing was 8,560 yuan, up eight percent.

Chai said the city's growing population, which now exceeds 15 million permanent residents and some 4 million temporary residents, is also putting intense pressure on the city's natural resources and environment.

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