The Sun (Malaysia)

China won’t resort to massive infrastruc­ture stimulus

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BEIJING: China will take a targeted approach to boosting investment and will not resort to massive stimulus in its infrastruc­ture push, the state planner said yesterday, as Beijing ramps up support to stabilise its slowing economy.

The comments flagging a cautious approach to stimulus come a day after economic data showed fixed asset investment posting meagre growth in November.

“We will resolutely not open the floodgate of stimulus and will scientific­ally push forward these major projects,“Meng Wei, spokeswoma­n at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, told reporters in a regular briefing.

Meng said the market would play a decisive role in resource allocation and that policy support for infrastruc­ture projects in the central and western China would be stepped up.

Official data released on Monday showed fixed asset investment grew 5.2% from January-November, in line with the increase seen in the first 10 months, which was the weakest in decades. Infrastruc­ture investment, in particular, slowed further.

As Beijing seeks to avert a sharper economic slowdown, policymake­rs have brought forward 1 trillion yuan (RM588 billion) of the 2020 local government special bonds quota, used to finance infrastruc­ture projects, to this year.

In November, the NDRC approved eight fixed-asset investment projects in November worth a combined 7.1 billion yuan, according to Meng. That compared with approvals worth 44.2 billion yuan in October.

China has the confidence to achieve its full-year economic targets, Meng said.

Beijing has said it would maintain its proactive fiscal stance and prudent monetary policy, making economic adjustment­s more forward-looking, targeted and effective. – Reuters

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