China plans to control red-hot economy
Inflation still a major concern; Beijing plans more measures to control red-hot economy, mop up liquidity.
China’s money supply grew at the slowest pace in seven months in December, the central bank said on Saturday, after it took measures to cool inflation and prevent the economy from overheating. China may face pressure from Europe and the US to allow faster gains by its currency after the nation’s trade surplus surged 48% to a record $262.2 billion last year.
“This year’s fiscal policy will focus on structural adjustments and help essentially solve the problem of excess liquidity,” Li said at a conference in Beijing. “Monetary policies should focus on quantitative controls to win more time for structural reforms.” China also needs to use administrative measures to tackle these issues, he said, without being specific.
The government will adjust resource prices this year to rectify a distorted energy-pricing system and boost domestic spending as its top priority, Li said. Weakness in the US dollar will limit China’s ability to raise interest rates and reserve ratios further, he added.
“Fiscal policy can play a bigger role,” said San Feng, an economist at the State Information Center in Beijing.
“The government this year needs to cut its fiscal deficit and debt issuance for long-term construction projects, and it should lower taxes on sectors affected most by price controls.”
China’s central bank has pledged a ‘tight’ monetary policy this year, after six interest-rate increases in 2007, to curb lending and prevent escalating asset prices.
“We will decisively fight against inflation and implement tight monetary policies,” said Yi Gang, vice-governor of the People’s Bank of China, at the same conference on Sunday. “But we will do it prudently to ensure economic stability.”
Consumer prices jumped to an 11-year high of 6.9% in November, prompting Premier Wen Jiabao to announce on January 9 a freeze on energy and utility price gains in the “near term”.
China has set a preliminary target for the full-year inflation rate at 4.6% in 2008 and that for annual economic growth at 8%, Xu said. Both targets need to be officially set at the sessions of the National People’s Congress, or the country’s parliament, which are scheduled to be convened in March, he added.
The US and Europe say the yuan, even after recent advances, is still at a level that gives local companies an unfair advantage in overseas markets.
The December trade surplus shrank to $22.7 billion from $26.2 billion in November, as exports grew at the slowest pace in two years, indicating recent yuan gains, the cooling global expansion and cuts to export-tax rebates on polluting industries are beginning to bite.
The banking regulator last quarter banned Agricultural Bank of China and six other banks from making new loans, according to the official Shanghai Securities News. China’s economy probably expanded 11.5% in 2007, the fastest pace in 13 years, according to government forecasts.
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