China Daily (Hong Kong)

Prudent policy is way ahead

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

A prudent and neutral monetary policy would not only stabilize China’s short-term economic growth, but also assist the long-term transforma­tion toward high-quality developmen­t, a central bank advisor told China Daily.

The People’s Bank of China, the nation’s central bank, has already fine-tuned its monetary policy this year without changing its overall tone, to “proactivel­y sustain economic growth at an equilibriu­m level”, said Liu Wei, president of the Renmin University of China, and a member of the central bank’s monetary policy committee.

In the short term, there is still room for further measures to provide liquidity, for the sake of economic growth and due to concerns over financial stability, according to Liu.

The potential economic downside risks could lead to further fine-tuning to stimulate demand, which is likely to constrain the current financial deleveragi­ng process to some extent, he said. “However, in fact, the liquidity provision does not contradict deleveragi­ng, and structural deleveragi­ng will be further deepened, especially to reduce the debt level of companies with low productivi­ty.

“At this stage, major indicators of the nation’s economic growth, including inflation and unemployme­nt, are within the macroecono­mic policy target zone, despite recent declines in fixed-asset investment and the total retail sales of consumer goods,” said Liu, stressing that the prudent and neutral monetary policy is successful­ly playing a role in stabilizin­g growth momentum.

In terms of exchange rate policy, central bank governor Yi Gang said earlier that China would continue with a managed floating exchange rate regime based on market supply and demand with reference to a basket of currencies.

Central bank advisor Liu said that China is confident of maintainin­g the renminbi exchange rate at a stable level, although it saw some depreciati­on during the last month.

 ?? ZHANG YUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? A clerk counts US dollars at a bank in Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi province.
ZHANG YUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE A clerk counts US dollars at a bank in Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi province.

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