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Key think tank scales back outlook for 2014

The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences on Friday lowered its forecast for 2014 GDP growth to 7.3 percent, one of many institutions that are paring back their economic expansion outlooks for the nation.

The CASS cut its forecast from 7.5 percent to 7.4 percent just a few months ago. The latest forecast could be instrumental in decisions taken by the Central Economic Work Conference in December, [Offshore Company Incorporation]domestic media reports said.

The CASS said in its quarterly analysis that the latest revision was prompted by the cooling real estate sector and its impact on investment, a pillar of the economy.

The growth in real estate investment, roughly accounting for one-quarter of China's investment, fell to a record low of 13.2 percent for the first eight months of the year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. As a result, fixed-asset investment growth slumped to a 14-year low of 16.5 percent in the same period.

"Although the government has shored up investment in infrastructure, which we expect to grow more than 20 percent for the full year, that cannot offset the drag of property investment", the report said.

Commenting on the other two engines of GDP growth, the report estimated that exports would not significantly improve because of slack external demand. Consumption would grow steadily, the report said.

CASS Vice-President Li Yang said the most volatile factor in growth would be investment. Although investment growth had slowed, that also meant that wasteful investment could be constrained and overcapacity could be alleviated, he said.

Economic growth "has entered the 'new normal', which is a good thing judging by the sustainability of the economic growth", he said.

The CASS' latest assessment added to signs that the central government is increasingly comfortable with a more moderate growth level. During a State Council executive meeting on Wednesday, [Company Registration in USA] Premier Li Keqiang told the cabinet that the economy is "running within a proper range".

He said: "The outside world has a misunderstanding that 7.5 percent growth is our lowest acceptable line. But I've said that 'a bit higher or lower than that is OK', as long as employment and incomes are growing."

The central bank said on Sunday that it will maintain its "steady" monetary policy, adding various monetary tools to maintain adequate liquidity. Analysts said the comment was signal that the bank will not resort to cutting interest rates or reserve requirement ratios as many investors had hoped.

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