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Growth in FDI also slowed from 5.3% in 2013, and was the weakest in two years, indicating that the economic cooldown and shifting composition of the Chinese economy are starting to temper foreign sentiment.
Investment flows into China are an important gauge of the health of the world economy and is also a good indicator of where capital is flowing within the country.
The data showed that the government-led shift away from investment-heavy industries toward services and consumption is taking hold with service sector FDI increasing 7.8%, while manufacturing FDI declined 12.3%.
Services made up 55.4% of overall FDI, with manufacturing taking up 33.4%.
FDI in December leapt 10.3% from the same month in 2013 to $13.32 billion, MOFCOM said.
Investment from South Korea rose 29.8% year-to-date, the fastest in 2014, followed by Britain with 28% growth. Japanese FDI fell 38.8% while EU investment declined 5.3%. Data next week is expected to show China posting its lowest annual gross domestic product growth in 24 years.
The central government has acknowledged that GDP will slow as it seeks to reform the economy and find new engines of growth, all while navigating the risks of a cooling property market, excess factory capacity and sluggish investment.