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Slowing US economy may drag down China’s GDP
Beijing—If the US economic
slowdown sustains for one year, it could drag down China’s gross
domestic product (GDP) by 1 percent, said a Chinese economist on Sunday.
Fan Gang, a Monetary Policy Committee member of the People’s Bank of
China, the central bank, said the US subprime mortgage crisis affected
the Chinese economy mainly through trade and investment.
Fan made the remarks at the 2008 annual conference of the Boao Forum for
Asia, which concluded in China’s southern Hainan Province Sunday.
Historical figures revealed a 1 percentage point slide in the US economy
would lead to 5 to 6 percentage points decline in China’s exports to the
United States, Fan said.
China’s slower exports, however, were largely due to the government’s
export policy shift, not the credit crunch, Fan said.
Weak dollar and continuous US interest rate cuts had raised people’s
expectation of a stronger yuan, and triggered a hefty inflow of overseas
funds to China.
The subprime mortgage product itself was not to blame, he noted,
pointing to the poor risk management as the culprit.
He noted people should also look at the bright side of the coin as
imports from the affected economies will eventually rebound as long as
they enjoy steady growth.
Of the total $180 billion increase of China’s foreign reserve in the
first two months, a hefty 150 billion came from the overseas funds
inflow, he said.
The massive funds could push up domestic prices, while on the other hand
contribute to the economy as well. As a matter of fact, emerging markets
will continue to vie for foreign investment for a long period of time,
he said.
He stressed that the prevention of a financial crisis should top Chinese
government’s macro-economic policy, saying a drastic Renminbi
appreciation could give rise to a crisis, and preemptive self-regulation
is the best way to avert it.
Chinese exporters can not afford a one-off appreciation that could
trigger drastic order losses, and the moderate pace could offer them a
cushion from the negative impacts, he said.
Euro appreciates faster than Yuan did, resulting in yuan’s depreciation
against other currencies including Euro and the Japanese Yen, Fan said.
That could cause more imbalances with other trading partners of China
like EU and Japan. Therefore, it is up to the dollar to decide the
balanced pace for the Yuan’s appreciation, he said.
People’s Bank of China governor Zhou Xiaochuan said during the
International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington that the exchange-rate
has limited impact on adjusting the trade imbalance, and
over-exaggeration of its function is not only impractical but will
misguide the course of such an adjustment.
He told a news conference on Saturday that the negative impact on the
Chinese economy, brought by the subprime crisis,is lighter than
expected, and the losses of China’s financial institutions are within
their tolerance, which will not affect their profitability and share
prices.
Liu Mingkang, head of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said
Saturday at the Boao Forum for Asia that China should draw a lesson from
the credit crunch and strengthen risk control and supervision in its
financial reforms.
“The crisis reminded us that China’s financial industry must open step
by step to the outside world. Otherwise, we will be incapable of coping
with the accompanying risks and problems,” he said. “Supervision and
monitoring is very important.”
Established in 2001, the Boao Forum has become a major platform for
discussion and debate on economic development in Asia. The theme of this
year’s annual conference of the forum is “Green Asia: moving towards
win-win through changes”.—Xinhua |