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Greater controls set to protect economy
Beijing—High inflation and
fixed-asset investment growth are China's biggest economic concerns,
prompting authorities to persist with a tight monetary policy,
Vice-Premier Wang Qishan said on Friday.
In an address to the Lujiazui Forum in Shanghai, Wang also said the
government would take specific measures, including prudent fiscal
policies and strengthened and refined macroeconomic controls, to curb an
overheated economy and inflation.
His remarks were made prior to Monday's release of the consumer price
index for April, 8.2 percent according to Bloomberg's survey of 22
economists.
The figure is slightly lower than March's inflation but still much
higher than the government's goal of 4.8 percent for the whole year.
China's producer price index, another key inflation indicator, rose 8.1
percent in April - the fastest pace in more than three years.
"China's economy continues to grow fast," Wang said. "But the economy is
facing contradictions and problems. Prices are relatively high, while
fixed-asset investments have not returned to rational levels."
China's economy, the world's fourth largest, expanded 10.6 percent in
the first quarter from a year earlier, the ninth straight quarter of
growth of more than 10 percent.
Wang, the former Beijing mayor now in charge of China's financial
sector, also called for tighter controls on cross-border capital flows
to ensure stability in the financial system.
"We will continue to strengthen supervision over cross-border capital
flows and accelerate the development of the financial security network,"
he said.
—Daily Mail, People’s Daily news exchange item |