China Daily (Hong Kong)

Quality focus augurs well for economy

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s quality-focused growth model and its further opening-up will benefit the global economy and internatio­nal governance systems, officials said.

The emphasis on the quality of economic growth rather than quantity and stressing the environmen­t protection issue in the report to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China by General Secretary Xi Jinping two weeks ago has been remarkable, said Alfred Schipke, senior resident representa­tive for the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in China.

“There is no need of further policy stimulus in China, although it may stabilize growth in the short term,” suggested the IMF official at a seminar on internatio­nal economic governance reform, hosted by the Internatio­nal Economics and Finance Institute under the Ministry of Finance on Saturday.

Schipke expects China will continue to engage with other countries, in terms of a further opening-up reform, which is a positive signal to the world and it will also support a strengthen­ing of the domestic economic growth. The multilater­al systems, such as the IMF, will also benefit from the progressin­g globalizat­ion, he added.

China’s Vice-Minister of Finance Shi Yaobin said at the seminar that China is and will always be the contributo­r and participan­t in internatio­nal economic governance, “and this will never change”.

He urged to continuall­y push forward reforms of the internatio­nal governance system through innovative methods. “The reform should better reflect the true economic developmen­t stamore tus of different member countries and serve a much more stabilized and improved global economy, which also requires to enhance the governance power and efficiency.”

A much fairer and more open governance system should benefit a broader range of countries and prevent the rise of anti-globalizat­ion, according to the viceminist­er.

“As China has contribute­d than 30 percent of the global economic growth, what happens in China will have significan­t impact on the rest of the world. Its emphasis on the reform implementa­tion will benefit the internatio­nal governance mechanism as well as the average person in the country and China is very open to the potential challenges,” said Schipke.

“It is pleasing to see that China has tightened financial sector regulation­s” and the government’s crackdown on financial leveraging is efficient, considerin­g the current moderate household and public sector debt levels, but with a relatively higher level of corporate debt.

The financial sector’s opening, including the liberaliza­tion of capital account, is expected, which will bring in more competitio­n from overseas to accelerate domestic developmen­t, he said.

There is no need of further policy stimulus in China ...”

Alfred Schipke,

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