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    China Business
     Mar 6, 2008
China confirms inflation enemy number one
By John Ng and Olivia Chung

HONG KONG - Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, warning that inflation and overheating remain key threats to the economy, told the country's parliament that more measures would be taken to curb price rises and rein in lending.

Major tasks of this year’s macro-economic controls are "to prevent economic growth from shifting to overheating from relatively fast growth, to prevent structural price rises from becoming entrenched inflation," Wen said in his keynote government work report to the opening of the annual session of the National People’s Congress (NPC), in Beijing on Wednesday. His speech was broadcast live on China Central Television.

Wen pledged to carry out a "tight" monetary policy this year because of the strong possibility of a rebound in fixed-asset




investment, excessive money supply and lending, and excess liquidity and inflationary pressures have yet to be eased. Therefore "financial controls need to be strengthened, and the excessively fast growth in money supply and lending should be curbed," he said.

At present, China's key lending and deposit rates are 7.47% and 4.14%, both at nine-year highs. Commercial banks are required to set aside 15% of deposits as reserves. The government also curbs lending via direct instructions to lenders. This has not stopped inflation - which reached 7.1% in January - from accelerating to the fastest pace since 1996.

Wen vowed to take more measures, including price controls, to tame prices while avoiding triggering a sharp slowdown as US export demand weakens. "Uncertainties and potential risks in the international economic environment are increasing," Wen said, citing the effects of the US subprime meltdown.

The government aims to cap price hikes at 4.8% for the whole of this year, the same as the rate in 2007, Wen said. Last year's inflation was the highest in 11 years.

In Hong Kong, economist Ma Tieying said in a TV interview with "now News" that Wen’s report was an elaboration of policy principles set by the government's Central Economic Work Conference in December. The conference set two main goals for 2008: to prevent the economy from overheating while keeping relatively high-speed growth, and to prevent structural prices rises from becoming entrenched inflation.

"China is caught between a global slowdown led by the US and soaring inflation at home. The Chinese government is aware that the home economy is becoming more difficult, so it will not relax its macro-economic controls," he said.

Ma said the government was now likely to take more monetary policy measures to curb credit, such as raising the deposit reserve ratio and interest rates.

JP Morgan said in a research note that Wen affirmed that the government policy of supporting solid, sustainable economic growth has not changed. "The authorities are aware of the growing external risks and the report stressed that the macro control will be kept reasonably flexible in order to achieve this year's macro policy goals including stable and 'relatively fast' growth. As such, we believe the content of Wen’s keynote speech is much more benign for growth than the market has been worried about."

The premier reiterated an 8% growth target for gross domestic product (GDP) growth this year, unchanged from last year. It is generally expected real growth will exceed this. The economy expanded 11.4% in 2007, the fastest pace in 13 years, to reach 24.66 trillion yuan (US$3.46 trillion), becoming the world’s fourth largest, (after the United States, Japan and Germany in US dollar terms), Wen said.

JP Morgan said that setting an official GDP growth target well below actual current growth rates signaled concern about overheating and a preference for more balanced and sustainable growth.

"The implication is that they will assert an increasing emphasis on supporting domestic demand and gradually rebalancing external trade, as well as on environmental concerns and energy conservation," JP Morgan said.

JP Morgan said it held to its 2008 real GDP growth forecast of 10.5%, with steadily strengthening domestic demand and moderating export growth. An earlier forecast by the State Council Development and Research Center predicted GDP growth this year could slow to 10.5% as export demand weakens.

A record trade surplus pumped US$262 billion into the financial system last year. Money supply grew at the quickest pace in 20 months in January. As part of the country’s efforts to narrow the trade gap so as to curb money supply, Wen pledged to allow greater flexibility in yuan’s exchange rate. China has allowed faster gains by the yuan this year, cutting import costs and pushing up export prices. The currency has risen almost 3% against the US dollar in the first two months of this year after gaining 7% last year. Some analysts forecast the yuan could rise to 6.6 yuan for one US dollar by end of this year from the current 7.12.

Wen promised the Chinese government will accelerate financial reforms and strengthen regulation and supervision. One target of financial reforms is to "optimize the structure of the capital market, to promote the healthy and stable development of stock market", he said. This year a Nasdaq-like growth enterprise board will be launched, Wen said, adding that China will also speed up the development of bond market and "make steady progress" in developing futures market.

An editorial in the People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper, last month said the growth enterprise board would be launched in the first half of this year. Index futures are also likely to be marketed this year, though a timetable has yet to be set.

Andrew Wong, associate director of One China Securities Limited in Hong Kong, said the launch of a growth enterprise board and index futures were steps in the right direction as they could help reduce the volatility of China’s security market and thus favor the healthy development of the country's fledgling stock market.

He expected a timetable for introduction of index futures to be made public in the second quarter. "In order to satisfy the strong demand for fund raising by small- and medium-sized enterprises, particularly privately run ones, Beijing should launch the growth enterprise board. However, a supervision mechanism, laws and regulations, as well as education should be provided before the launch of the board or it will only become a highly speculative market," he said.

Wen, making his address one day after the government said defense spending would jump 17.6% to 417.8 billion yuan this year, said a strong military is central to China's modernization.

"We must balance economic development and national defense development to make China prosperous and the armed forces strong as we carry out modernization ... Our aim is to enable the army to fully carry out its historic mission in the new stage in the new century," Wen said.

Improving the military would "enhance its ability to respond to security threats and accomplish a diverse array of military tasks, staunchly protect China's sovereignty, security and territorial integrity".

The Chinese premier said the Summer Olympics in Beijing, which open on August 8, will be vital for the country's economic and social development. The government has invested tens of billions of yuan in preparation for the Games, seeing the event as a source of huge national pride.

"All sons and daughters of the Chinese nation are looking forward to the Olympics, which will be of great importance in promoting China's economic and social development and increasing friendship and cooperation between Chinese people and the peoples of other countries," Wen told the 2,970 delegates.

Wen also referred to government plans to reform its Cabinet system. The changes will "mainly center on changing the way the government functions, appropriately dividing responsibilities among departments that exercise macro-economic regulation, adjusting and improving bodies in charge of management, and improving departments responsible for public administration and public services", he said.

Media reports have said some central government bodies will be scraped or merged into a few mega-ministries covering energy, transportation and the environment. Wen said detailed plans on the reforms will be submitted to the NPC for approval. The legislative session ends March 18.

John Ng is a freelance journalist based in Hong Kong. Olivia Chung is a senior Asia Times Online reporter.


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