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 Helping poor matters more than ranking: China 
A worker walks with a shovel at a construction site in Suining, in southwest China's Sichuan province, Monday, Aug. 16. China's government played down its new status as the world's second-largest economy, saying Tuesday it still is a developing country and needs to focus on improving life for millions of impoverished Chinese. (AP)

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Helping poor matters more than ranking: China

BEIJING -- China's government said Tuesday it still is a developing country despite becoming the second-largest economy, reflecting its reluctance to take on new obligations on climate change and other issues.

Beijing needs to improve life for millions of impoverished Chinese, said a Commerce Ministry spokesman, Yao Jian. It was the government's first public reaction to news Monday that China passed Japan in economic output in the April-to-June quarter, confirming its arrival as a global commercial power.

“China is a developing country,” Yao said. “The quality of China's economic development still needs to be raised. It needs more effort to improve economic quality and people's lives.”

Rapid growth has boosted the communist government's political and economic influence abroad. But Beijing has resisted adopting binding limits on greenhouse gas emissions or making commitments in other areas such as easing controversial currency controls or guaranteeing foreign suppliers equal treatment in government purchasing.

China overtook Japan after Tokyo on Monday reported quarterly gross domestic product of US$1.286 trillion, behind China's US$1.335 trillion reported earlier.

With a population of 1.3 billion, China ranks among the poorest countries per person, with an average income of US$3,600 last year, compared with Japan's US$37,800.

China's government is in the midst of a marathon effort to spread prosperity from its thriving eastern cities to the poor countryside and west. Communist leaders are trying to diffuse tensions over a huge wealth gap between an elite who have benefited most from three decades of reform and the poor majority.

China has more than 40 million people living below its official poverty line, Yao said.

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