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Central bank has space to ease

Rates lower than growth figures

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“Even though US interest rates are rising, the PBOC could cut rates again.” Louis Kuijs

SHANGHAI: China’s current interest rates are “reasonable” and provide room for future policy action, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) says, adding to expectatio­ns it may resume lowering rates in coming months.

Real interest rates in the country are “slightly lower” than the pace of potential economic growth, the central bank said in a statement on its verified Wechat account.

Such a situation helps make debt sustainabl­e and provides the government with “extra” policy scope, it said. The current levels of interest rates are “the best strategy that leaves room for the future,” the PBOC said.

The statement was the fourth in a series of articles published by the PBOC since the middle of September explaining its policy. The central bank last week refrained from cutting its key interest rates as it defended a depreciati­ng yuan.

Banks followed by keeping their main lending rates unchanged on Tuesday, although speculatio­n is growing they may ease in the coming months.

Economists said the PBOC’S pause was partly because policy makers are assessing the impact of previous easing measures. Further policy support is still necessary, they argued, since the economy is being dragged down by repeated Covid outbreaks, a property market slump and slowing exports.

“The PBOC tried to say that even though US interest rates are rising, it could cut rates again if necessary,” said Louis Kuijs, chief Asia economist for S&P Global Ratings.

China’s lending rates are roughly in the 4% to 5% range while time deposit rates are at 1% to 2%, according to the PBOC’S statement.

The economy grew 2.5% in the first half of this year after expanding 8.1% last year. Analysts have been steadily downgradin­g China’s growth forecasts this year as economic risks mounted.

The Asian Developmen­t Bank was the latest to do so, projecting a 3.3% expansion compared with 4% previously. That’s lower than the consensus of 3.5% in a Bloomberg survey of economists and far below Beijing’s official target of around 5.5% announced in March.

The PBOC said in the statement that it will further release the benefits of the loan prime rate reform and let the market-based adjustment of deposit rates “play an important role”.

China’s biggest banks recently lowered their benchmark deposit rates across the board for the first time since 2015, a move designed to help them boost lending to shore up economic growth.

The central bank has cut the rate on its oneyear policy loans, known as the medium-term lending facility, twice this year already, driving bank lending rates down.

Even so, total credit extended to the economy in July hit a record low and only mildly recovered last month.

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