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Tight monetary policy to stay
Beijing—China’s money and
credit growth will slow this year as the central bank implements a
battery of tightening measures to achieve its primary goal of taming
inflation, a senior central bank official said on Sunday.
Consumer inflation hit an 11-year high of 7.1 percent in January,
prompting concerns that price pressures could spread from specific
products such as meat and edible oils to the broader economy.
Yi said the central bank would not back off from the shift it declared
in December to a “tight” monetary policy from a “prudent” stance, even
though domestic and global economic risks had grown since then.
Yi said the deepening of the fallout from the US subprime mortgage
crisis and the devastating snow storms that hit much of central and
southern China in late January had made the policy-making environment
more complex.
“But taking into consideration all of these changes, we still think
inflation is our biggest threat and we should spare no effort to tame
prices,” he said.
“In 2008, we will keep implementing a tight monetary policy by adopting
open market operations, using bank reserve ratios and guiding banks to
extend loans in a reasonable fashion,” Yi said.
“We will stick to such a policy no matter how the domestic and
international conditions change.”
He said he expected gross domestic product to grow by around 10.0
percent this year, compared with 11.4 percent in 2007. The International
Monetary Fund has also pencilled in 10 percent growth, through some
private economists are less optimistic.
Yi’s estimate of 16 percent M2 growth this year is the most concrete
target for money growth from the central bank so far. He said loan
growth would probably slow this year too. Domestic currency lending
expanded by 16.1 percent in 2007.
“This framework is exactly what a tight monetary policy means,” he said
of the expected slowdown in M2 and lending.
In its latest monetary policy report, released on Friday, the PBOC said
it would step up use of the yuan’s exchange rate to help bring better
balance to the country’s international payments and the domestic
economy.
Yi made no specific reference to the yuan, but his focus on inflation
largely echoed that of Friday’s report.
The central bank let the currency reach 7.1413 per dollar on Thursday,
the highest level since it scrapped a dollar peg in July 2005 and
allowed it to float in managed bands.—Xinhua |