China said Wednesday it had revised its 2010 economic growth up to 10.4 percent from the 10.3 percent announced previously, due mainly to higher-than-estimated output in its service sector.
The National Bureau of Statistics announced the gross domestic product (GDP) for last year totalled 40.12 trillion yuan ($6.3 trillion) — 321.9 billion yuan more than the previously-released figure.
China — the world's second largest economy — routinely revises its growth figures.
According to the statement, the country's secondary sector — which mainly refers to manufacturing — accounted for more than 46.8 percent of the nation's economy.
The services sector represented 43.1 percent of the economy, while the primary sector — mainly agriculture — came to 10.1 percent.
This year, the economy expanded at a slower but still robust pace in the second quarter as Beijing battles to bring politically sensitive inflation under control, with GDP up 9.5 percent on year in the April-June period.
This compares with 9.7 percent growth in the first three months of the year, and 9.8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010.