China Daily

IMF fears worst recession since 1930s

Agency predicts rebound for China of up to 9.2% growth in 2021 after 1.2% rise this year

- By CHEN JIA in Beijing and ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington

With the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund on Tuesday predicting the worst global downturn since the 1930s, China has deployed an additional policy response to address the slowdown caused by the novel coronaviru­s pandemic and facilitate economic recovery through incentiviz­ing bank lending and stabilizin­g corporate hiring.

A few hours after the IMF revised its projection on China’s economic growth outlook — to 1.2 percent GDP growth this year, before a strong rebound up to 9.2 percent in 2021 — the nation’s central bank cut a key lending rate to a record low and injected large amounts of liquidity into the financial sector on Wednesday.

The IMF said the global economy is projected to contract by 3 percent this year, and the COVID-19 pandemic would send global growth into its deepest recession since the Great Depression in the 1930s.

“The Great Lockdown”, as the IMF called the economic downturn, could weaken global demand and depress exports, adding risks to otherwise recovering Chinese business activities. It requires stronger monetary and fiscal action to minimize persistent problems that could emerge from subdued investment and job losses in this severe downturn, economists said.

Blunting the impact of the severe shock requires a surge of government debt, which is the key funding source of fiscal stimulus, and an optimized debt management system should be put in place to prevent potential financial risks during the recovery phase, said Li Yang, director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ National

Institutio­n for Finance and Developmen­t.

“Interest rates should be cut quickly, with an increase of money and credit supply. As central banks worldwide are taking aggressive monetary easing, there is no need for China to hold still,” Li said.

“China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China, cut the one-year medium-term lending facility rate — a base to determine the new lending bench mark called the loan prime rate — by 0.2 percentage points to 2.95 percent. The drop was the largest within four years, and the new MLF rate hit the lowest level since its introducti­on in 2014.

Financial analysts expected a lower LPR, down by the same degree, to be reported on April 20, to further ease lending costs of corporate borrowers, especially to support smaller businesses under pressure.

The PBOC injected 100 billion yuan ($14.16 billion) of liquidity through the MLF and released about 200 billion yuan in long-term funds into the interbank market through the targeted cut of some small and medium-sized depositary institutio­ns’ reserve requiremen­t ratios on Wednesday.

New financial relief measures were put in place before China reports its major economic indicators, set for Friday. Economists predicted a sharp slowdown in the first quarter caused by the coronaviru­sinduced lockdown.

Zhang Ming, an economist at the Institute of World Economics and Politics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said expansiona­ry fiscal policy should take the leading role in the recovery process and support funding for corporatio­ns and households. Measures include tax relief, direct subsidies, coupons that can be traded for consumer goods and cash payments to individual­s, he said.

The fiscal actions should first keep small and medium-sized companies from bankruptcy and subsidize the unemployed, then strengthen infrastruc­ture investment, Zhang said.

Robin Xing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley, said that Beijing could soon approve special central government bonds and raise local government­s’ special bond front-loading quota to support growth. He estimated the total amount of government bond financing could be 4.3 trillion yuan higher than last year, supporting a widening in cyclically adjusted augmented fiscal deficit.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian said at a news conference on Wednesday that major economies should take necessary monetary, fiscal and structural policies to stabilize market expectatio­ns and improve economic resilience. He called for eliminatio­n of trade restrictio­ns such as tariff hikes and stabilizat­ion of global industrial and supply chains.

The IMF updated on Tuesday its “Global Financial Stability Report”, which said financial conditions in China have been “broadly stable”, in contrast with other countries. This may have reflected some important factors, including early, proactive efforts by the authoritie­s that helped stabilize market conditions and sentiment, the report said.

“The large, timely and targeted, fiscal, monetary and financial policies already taken by many policymake­rs — including credit guarantees, liquidity facilities, loan forbearanc­e, expanded unemployme­nt insurance, enhanced benefits and tax relief — have been lifelines to households and businesses, and this support should continue,” said Gita Gopinath, the IMF’s chief economist.

“Policymake­rs must also plan for the recovery. As containmen­t measures come off, policies should shift swiftly to supporting demand, incentiviz­ing hiring, and repairing balance sheets in the private and public sector to aid the recovery,” she added.

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