Beijing invested a record 16 billion yuan (2.3 billion dollars) this year in Tibet, whose economy suffered severely after waves of unrest in March, Chinese state media reported Sunday.
Tibet's industrial economic growth fell 11 percent on year in 2008's first half while fixed asset investment dropped 10.3 percent due to the violence, Xinhua reported, citing the Tibetan Development and Reform Committee.
To prop up the economy, Beijing in July ordered special subsidies and incentives focusing on sectors such as tourism and infrastructure development, the report said.
Beijing counters critics' charges of oppression in Tibet by pointing to its investment in the region. It said in 2008 it put more money into the region than any year since economic planning began there in 1951.
Tensions came to a head on March 14 when violence erupted in the Tibetan capital Lhasa against Chinese rule, before spreading to other areas of western China with Tibetan populations. The development committee said the increased investment had borne fruit and estimated that overall the region's economy would grow 10.1 percent from last year to 39.2 billion yuan, Xinhua said.
Jin Shixun, a committee official, said investment would continue to increase alongside Beijing's various efforts to boost consumption during the economic slowdown.
Fixed asset investment is expected to rise 15 percent in 2009, Xinhua said.
Tourism plummeted after the unrest when the government sealed off the Himalayan region to tourists. Authorities only allowed foreign tourists back at the end of June.
As a result, only 340,000 travellers went to Tibet between January and June this year, according to previous state media reports, a dramatic drop from the same period in 2007 when more than 1.1 million people visited.
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