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The First China GDP by Dr. Fengbo Zhang and State Council of China (1987)

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Year GDP(milCN¥) GDP(10milUS$) Per Capita(US$) Period Growth Rate
1952 68,090 2,854 49.7
1953 81,960 3,279 55.8 1953~1957 8.88%
1954 86,470 3,368 55.9
1955 91,090 3,621 58.9 1958~1960 9.19%
1956 101,960 4,138 65.9
1957 104,960 4,264 65.9 1961~1965 -0.17%
1958 129,240 5,250 79.6
1959 141,260 5,738 85.4 1966~1978 6.62%
1960 141,030 5,729 86.5
1961 115,130 4,677 71.0 1979~1986 8.76%
1962 106,810 4,339 64.5
1963 115,600 4,696 67.9 1953~1986 6.64%
1964 134,790 5,475 77.7
1965 160,340 6,513 89.8
1966 183,340 7,447 99.9
1967 171,890 6,983 91.4
1968 163,570 6,644 84.6
1969 186,920 7,593 94.1
1970 222,650 9,045 109.0
1971 240,100 10,049 117.9
1972 246,920 11,063 126.9
1973 267,960 12,975 145.4
1974 271,430 14,014 154.2
1975 290,100 15,103 163.4
1976 281,290 14,912 159.2
1977 304,640 16,767 176.5
1978 348,860 20,536 213.3
1979 389,270 24,653 252.7
1980 428,550 27,019 273.7
1981 457,850 26,955 269.4
1982 495,980 26,700 262.9
1983 550,570 26,663 260.1
1984 655,330 27,157 262.4
1985 796,130 27,401 262.1
1986 909,090

Sources: WikiChina: China GDP,

Usanjlb (talk) 16:20, 14 May 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Data of three International organizations

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There's a lot of great data here but this table/graph/chart is absurdly complex and difficult to read. 69.78.100.101 (talk) 17:46, 22 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]

This Is Another Article Written By the Chinese Government

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This whole article is written by non-English speakers in the Chinese government, and the parts that are "sourced" are Chinese government sources, just the author quoting himself.

The section "Current status" has a wholly unsourced paragraph that has nothing to do with the current status, and also shows the author doesn't know the difference between "become" and "became":

China's nominal GDP by Expenditure approach surpassed that of Italy in 2000, France in 2002, the United Kingdom in 2006 and that of Germany in 2007, before overtaking Japan in 2009, making China the world's second largest economy after the United States. But adjusting for purchasing power parity (PPP), China surpassed Japan and become the world's second largest economy as early as 2002.

The author also doesn't understand what the word record means, as in, hottest temperature on record, as a later section says, "a record low of 6.25% in 1999", when other periods were lower than that.

The table halfway down is comical, having columns for "the former" and "the later".

If Wiki is going to allow governments to write articles about themselves, then there should be some oversight, discussion, and editing, so the articles can be more than chamber of commerce press releases and forward projections.75.79.161.13 (talk) 02:10, 25 May 2015 (UTC)[reply]

GDP Growth Rate of China is Confusing USD One Trillion to USD 11 Trillion in Just 15 Years

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The GDP of China in year 2000 was $1.029.04 Trillion USD... In just 15 years they achieved 11 trillion dollars in 2015... They grew by 10% in the initial years, but reached up to 14% around 2007 ... Then the rate reduced to around ~9 and later to ~7 percentage points... When I compute GDP growth with 10% rate consistently starting with data in year 2000 it comes to only $4.3 trillion USD... Computing with a consistent rate of 15% per year growth rate the total comes only to $8.4 trillion USD.. I am surprised how is this calculation of 11 trillion comes into picture?... I understand China undertook certain GDP calculation adjustments earlier in the decade... — Preceding unsigned comment added by 198.135.203.249 (talk) 00:23, 27 October 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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Annual GDP: there are questions that need to be answered

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The data given is for nominal prices. It is consistent with that produced by the UN at National Accounts Main Aggregates Database. The latter also gives real GDP at 2010 prices in RMB. Accordingly, real growth rates can be calculated. The UN data goes back only to 1970. Using it produces different growth rates to those given here. The difference is large in both directions until about 20 years ago. The differences need explaining. The reference to "China NBS: National data - annual - national accounts - Gross Domestic Product" given in Footnote 4 does not help. That contains the same nominal data but no real data except for an index that goes back to 1978. BHCASEY (talk) 13:52, 26 February 2018 (UTC) (--Robertiki (talk) 02:14, 4 March 2018 (UTC) moved question from article space)[reply]

Accuracy

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It's an "open secret" that official GDP figures are exaggerated, as a result of fabrication on the regional and national levels. The Chinese government itself has admitted as such:

https://qz.com/887709/chinas-liaoning-province-admitted-that-it-inflated-gdp-figures-from-2011-to-2014/
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-china-economy-wikileaks/chinas-gdp-is-man-made-unreliable-top-leader-idUSTRE6B527D20101206
https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2019/03/07/chinas-economy-might-be-nearly-a-seventh-smaller-than-reported

Why is non of this mentioned in the Wikipedia article on China's GDP? — Preceding unsigned comment added by Q746371 (talkcontribs) 03:20, 8 April 2020 (UTC)[reply]

The GDP data of all countries are exaggerated to varying degrees, and there is no need to single out China.Ewanma (talk) 02:27, 3 November 2021 (UTC)[reply]
This is simply not true: China's GDP has a level of exaggeration very different from e.g. Luxembourg. It is known that there are various systematic problems in the incentives and reporting not present in other countries.
I agree, it's extremely concerning that this article makes no mention of this and suggests foul play. DenverCoder9 (talk) 22:55, 31 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Misleading Title

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The article is currently titled "Historical GDP of China" but the earliest estimates are for 1952, so it excludes the vast majority of Chnese history. 173.79.50.41 (talk) 23:39, 13 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]