China Daily (Hong Kong)

Economists optimistic on growth prospects

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

The rising optimistic mood is relaxing Chinese economists’ furrowed brows, as they believe the world’s second-largest economy will bounce back in the second half, driven by the latest policy package.

The tone of economists’ speeches has shifted recently from the feelings of anxiety expressed in October and November last year. At that time, they warned that the “fasterthan-expected cooling” may hit the Chinese economy. But now, influentia­l economists say the “worst moment” will be passed without a hard landing.

Moderately slower deleveragi­ng, accompanie­d by a proactive fiscal policy, is able to prevent an economic slump, and overall growth may accelerate starting in the third quarter, a group of financial institutio­ns’ chief economists and scholars said at a forum at Tsinghua University on Thursday.

Their confidence was further consolidat­ed when the US central bank set aside another interest rate hike for the rest of the year.

“That could be a turning point, to end the global liquidity shortage and start an easing cycle,” according to Yao Yudong, chief economist with Dacheng Fund and a former central bank official. An easing global monetary situation will benefit China, leaving more room for domestic policymake­rs to stabilize growth, he said.

Domestical­ly, the country’s 2 trillion yuan ($297.5 billion) tax and fee reduction plan, at the top of the government’s task list this year, is the most aggressive move in decades. That requires great courage, while the challenges will be in line with the whole process to achieve the target, said the economists.

However, sustaining a longer recovery may require some “unconventi­onal” measures other than the traditiona­l monetary easing methods. Supporting private business and deepening structural reform could be a priority, said Lu Ting, chief China economist with Nomura Securities.

The property sector and infrastruc­ture constructi­on will continuall­y play a significan­t role, in supporting economic growth, he added.

“Deleveragi­ng should continue, but in a more moderate way. The baseline is to ensure no further risk will rise amid economic stabilizat­ion,” said Huang Yiping, deputy dean of the National School of Developmen­t at Peking University, who was a former central bank adviser.

He suggested that controllin­g the leverage growth rate, instead of roughly driving down the ratio, could be more efficient to tackle debt risk.

A “moderately easing” monetary policy, with a mild inflation level, can provide a sound environmen­t for improving the debt-to-GDP ratio, said Zhou Hao, deputy head of Tsinghua University’s PBC School of Finance.

“As long as no hyperinfla­tion happens, and no large scale quantitati­ve easing takes place, the country’s leverage level will not worsen dramatical­ly,” and the debt structure will be rebalanced, according to Zhou.

The “bottom” or the year’s slowest growth, may be in the second quarter, after that the rebound will start, they estimated.

In January-February, the National Bureau of Statistics indicated that industrial production growth slipped to 5.3 percent year-on-year, down from 5.7 percent in December. But fixed-asset investment growth accelerate­d to 6.1 percent from 5.9 percent in the last month of 2018.

The government may ramp up supportive policies in coming months, said Lu from Nomura Securities.

“We expect the People’s Bank of China to deliver a cut in the reserve requiremen­t ratio as early as April, by 0.5 percentage point, but the onshore stock markets are a determinin­g factor in whether this prediction materializ­es, as an outright stock bubble could dissuade the PBOC from a reduction.”

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