Last year's slowdown was largely due to Beijing's efforts to cool inflation and steer double-digit growth to a more sustainable level following a quick, stimulus-fueled rebound from the global crisis. Beijing responded with further stimulus efforts including looser credit but analysts say Chinese leaders are unlikely to repeat that strategy, which led to a sharp rise in debt.
The latest quarterly growth was above Beijing's official target of 7.5 per cent for the year. That is well above forecasts in the low single digits for Western economies and Japan but far from China's blistering growth of the past decade.
Recent economic data in China has given mixed signals, raising questions about whether a full-fledged recovery was gaining traction.
Inflation fell in March, indicating consumer demand might not be as strong as Beijing hoped. Import growth accelerated, suggesting companies and consumers were buying more, but some analysts said those figures might be distorted and unreliable.
Also in March, growth in factory output weakened to 8.9 per cent, down 1 percentage point from the first two months of the year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.
That was the lowest growth since August 2012, when fears of an abrupt "hard landing" of plunging growth were strong. Beijing responded by boosting lending and government spending.
Chinese leaders are unlikely to repeat that strategy after a 60 per cent surge in credit in the first quarter produced a lacklustre response, said IHS Global Insight analysts Xianfang Ren and Alistair Thornton in a report.
"We have lost confidence in a robust recovery," they said.
The rise in credit prompted ratings agency Fitch to cut its rating on China's long-term local currency sovereign debt last week, warning of potential financial risks.
Fitch said China's total credit, including informal lending among private entrepreneurs, may have risen to the equivalent of 198 per cent of gross domestic product in 2012 from 125 per cent in 2008.
Forecasters who expected growth to accelerate might have been misled by inaccurate trade data due to companies falsely reporting higher exports as a way to evade capital controls and bring money into China, said Moody's Analytics economist Alaistair Chan.
Despite the surge in lending, Monday's data showed a slowdown in investment growth that is driving the latest recovery.
First-quarter growth in spending on factories, real estate and other fixed assets declined to 20.9 per cent from the 21.1 per cent rate for the first two months of the year.
That shows the economy suffers from structural problems including excess production capacity in some industries that makes more investment unprofitable, said Yao.
"Given all this credit injected into the system, the future should look better," said Yao. "Nevertheless, the level of efficiency in the economy has declined. The same amount of money will no longer produce the same amount of growth."
In a positive sign, growth in retail sales edged up to 12.6 per cent in March from 12.3 per cent for the first two months of the year.
Recent increases in required minimum wages and an improved housing market should help to boost household spending, said Moody's Analytics economist Fred Gibson in a report.
Still, he cautioned, consumer confidence could be hurt if China's export weakness persists.
Also Monday, the World Bank trimmed its growth forecast for China this year by 0.1 percentage point to a still-robust 8.3 per cent.