China's $600 billion stimulus is dotted with questions
By Simon Rabinovitch - Analysis
BEIJING (Reuters) - There is no doubt that China's near-$600 billion (380 billion pounds) economic stimulus package is gigantic but, like so much in the opaque country, it is shrouded in ambiguities that complicate any assessment of its likely impact.
First and foremost, the size of the stimulus may be smaller than advertised.
Announcing the package on Sunday night, the government billed it as 4 trillion yuan (372 billion pounds) in extra spending, or roughly 15 percent of this year's estimated gross domestic product. Adjectives such as whopping or stonking come to mind.
Several qualifications, though, are necessary.
The money is to be spent by the end of 2010, meaning it will be spread over nine quarters rather than blasted out in one shot. That cuts the stimulus to about six percent of GDP per year.
Then there is the question of how much is actual new spending.
"The stimulus package is big, but it's actually a combination of a lot of things that have already been announced," said Ken Peng, a Citigroup economist in Shanghai.
For example, Beijing said it would devote 20 billion yuan to investment in Sichuan province and other areas of the country devastated by the earthquake earlier this year. But as the package announcement itself indicated, that was simply speeding up money earmarked for post-quake building next year. Continued...
Pound picking up strength
Sterling will gradually strengthen against the dollar over the next 12 months but is unlikely to move much, a Reuters poll shows. Full Article | Related Story

UK
US