The Sun (Malaysia)

China to cut banks’ reserve ratio from next month

Policymake­rs extend efforts to shore up fragile economic recovery

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BEIJING: China’s central bank will cut the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves from Feb 5, governor Pan Gongsheng said yesterday, the first such cut for the year as policymake­rs extend efforts to shore up a fragile economic recovery.

Pan said the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) would cut the reserve requiremen­t ratio for all banks by 50 basis points.

The move will free up one trillion yuan (RM660 billion) to the market, the central bank chief said at a press conference in Beijing.

The PBOC will also cut re-lending and re-discount interest rates by 25 basis points for the rural sector and small firms from Jan 25.

The reduction follows earlier cuts of 25 basis points for all banks in September and March last year.

The world’s second-largest economy has struggled to mount a strong post-Covid recovery as distress in the housing market, local government debt risks and weakening global demand slowed momentum.

A slew of policy measures have proven only modestly beneficial, raising pressure on authoritie­s to roll out more stimulus.

Last month, top Chinese leaders at a key meeting to chart the economic course for 2024 pledged to take more steps to support the recovery.

Analysts said more stimulus is needed this year as the government aims to spur growth to fend off deflationa­ry risks and keep a lid on unemployme­nt as businesses remained wary of adding workers.

But the central bank faces a dilemma as more credit is flowing to productive forces than into consumptio­n, which could add to deflationa­ry pressures and reduce the effectiven­ess of its monetary policy tools, analysts said.

The economy grew 5.2% last year, meeting the official target, but the recovery has been more shakier than investors had expected.

Analysts polled by Reuters expected economic growth to slow to 4.6% this year. – Reuters

 ?? ?? Paramilita­ry police officers standing guard in front of the headquarte­rs of the People’s Bank of China in Beijing. – REUTERSPIC
Paramilita­ry police officers standing guard in front of the headquarte­rs of the People’s Bank of China in Beijing. – REUTERSPIC

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