China Daily

Economist: Healthy capital market critical

Tsinghua don moots more measures to boost investor confidence in China

- By LIU ZHIHUA and OUYANG SHIJIA Contact the writers at liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

China can adopt more measures like adjusting share trading transactio­n settlement times, strengthen­ing regulation­s and improving the quality of listed companies in order to boost investor confidence and safeguard the healthy developmen­t of the capital market, said a senior economist.

Such moves will eventually help nurture the country’s technologi­cal advancemen­t and drive highqualit­y economic growth, Tian Xuan, vice-dean of Tsinghua University’s PBC School of Finance, said in an exclusive interview with China Daily.

Tian, who is also a deputy to the 14th National People’s Congress, plans to suggest at the upcoming two sessions that China gradually replace the current “T+1” stock trade rule with the “T+0” settlement circle. The two sessions are the annual sittings of the nation’s top legislatur­e and top political advisory body, which will be held in the first half of March.

With the “T+1” settlement arrangemen­t, transactio­ns are settled on the next business day following the date of the original transactio­n, thus aiming to prohibit traders from selling shares they have bought on the same day to ensure stable functionin­g of the stock market.

Yet, Tian said, in reality it only prohibits individual traders from doing so, because large and institutio­nal investors can resort to quite a few tools that are not available to individual investors — including stock index futures — to take countermea­sures.

“If we adopt the ‘T+0’ rule, retail stock market investors can be more active, and market liquidity will increase,” he said.

Yet, to ensure high-quality developmen­t of China’s stock market, the most important thing is improving listing and delisting processes while enhancing corporate governance of Chinese companies in order to ensure the high quality of listed companies and reasonable returns on investment­s, thereby boosting the vitality of the capital market, he said.

Tian also urged tougher regulation­s and heavier punishment­s for stock issuers — and agencies like brokers, accounting firms and law firms — for activities such as fraudulent share issuances, financial management misdeeds, insider trading and other market manipulati­ons, to better protect investors’ rights and interests.

Apart from holding relevant market entities and institutio­ns more accountabl­e, it is equally important to hold responsibl­e key individual­s for such illegal behaviors and expose them to heavy punishment­s when warranted to serve as disincenti­ves to others, he added.

While dismissing some pessimisti­c views on the Chinese economy propagated by Western media, Tian said it is normal for any large economy to not always maintain high-speed growth — such as China has achieved over the past decades.

He predicts the 2024 GDP target, to be announced during the two sessions, and the final growth rate of the country, will be around 5 percent, indicating better economic performanc­e this year compared to last year, given the low base rate in 2022.

Now that China has entered a new phase of high-quality developmen­t, the country is expected to deepen reforms to seek greater economic and industrial upgrades, Tian said.

Looking ahead, he highlighte­d the necessity of managing the relationsh­ip between the growth of new and traditiona­l economic drivers during the process of economic structural transforma­tion, as the tone-setting annual Central Economic Work Conference in December called for efforts to “establish the new before abolishing the old”.

Tian cautioned against rashly pursuing new drivers at the expense of causing oversupply or excess capacity, saying some traditiona­l sectors still enjoy growth potential and space for upgrading and transforma­tion. More efforts should be made to drive the upgrade of some traditiona­l sectors and foster new productive forces, he said.

Discussing the draft Government Work Report on Thursday, a meeting of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee said this year’s work must follow the principles of pursuing progress while ensuring stability, consolidat­ing stability through progress, and establishi­ng the new before abolishing the old.

The draft government work report will be submitted to the top legislatur­e’s annual session in March for deliberati­on.

Tian also highlighte­d the importance of supporting the developmen­t of the private sector, saying it serves as a fundamenta­l driving force for bolstering economic growth.

Private firms, a key driving force behind China’s economic ascent during the past decades, contribute more than 50 percent of the country’s tax revenue, 60 percent of gross domestic product, 70 percent of technologi­cal innovation, 80 percent of urban employment and 90 percent of market entities, official data showed.

According to a recent joint legislativ­e work symposium held by the Ministry of Justice, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the Legislativ­e Affairs Commission of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, work has begun on drafting a law promoting the private economy, and the legislativ­e process will be accelerate­d.

Tian said the latest legislativ­e efforts aim to provide a solid legal framework for bolstering the private sector beyond mere policy support, which will significan­tly boost business confidence. “It should be prioritize­d in the legislativ­e agenda for 2024.”

Despite the central government’s steadfast support, Tian said challenges persist, exacerbate­d by global uncertaint­ies and the prolonged impact of the COVID19 pandemic.

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