The Pak Banker

China will surprise world with reforms in 2018, Xi adviser says

- BEIJING -REUTERS

China will introduce more reform measures to open up its economy this year, according to Liu He, the top financial and economic adviser to President Xi Jinping. "Some measures will exceed the expectatio­ns of the internatio­nal community," Liu said Wednesday at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos, Switzerlan­d, without specifying what the new policies would be. "Opening up is not only important for China, but also for the whole world," he said, adding that a fresh reform push was also a celebratio­n of the 40th anniversar­y of the nation's shift away from a closed Communist system.

Further measures to encourage internatio­nal investors and make the world's second-largest economy more accessible are on the agenda for China at a time when the threat of a full-scale trade war with the U.S. is rising. As it battles pollution, poverty and financial risk, the economy needs all the growth drivers it can muster to offset the impact of those upgrades which are potentiall­y painful in the short-term.

"If they follow through on implementi­ng these steps, it will be quite a positive," said Jim O'Neill, former chief economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. "Donald Trump's advisers will need a new whipping horse."

Liu, who was elevated to the Communist Party's 25-member Politburo in October after many years of guiding economic policy behind the scenes, is taking on more public roles and seen as in line to become vice premier this year. The potential promotion may mean he'll lead the State Council's Financial Stability and Developmen­t Committee, a new organizati­on charged with corralling China's disparate financial regulators and defusing risks.

"Wednesday's speech by Liu in Davos marks his debut in front of the world," said Larry Hu, chief China economist at Macquarie Securities Ltd. in Hong Kong. "We believe this is meant to be a clear signal that Liu will be the spokespers­on for China's economic policy over the next five years."

Liu said economic globalizat­ion should be more "open, inclusive and bal- anced," echoing Xi's remarks last year, when he urged business and political elites to reject trade war and protection­ism. Xi's appearance at Davos, which has more usually been attended by China's premiers, showed the country has become more active in leading globalizat­ion.

"China has stood firm against all forms of protection­ism," Liu said. "We have broadened access to our financial markets and taken the initiative to increase imports." Beijing in November took a major step toward the long-awaited opening of its financial system, saying it will remove foreign ownership limits on banks while allowing overseas firms to take majority stakes in local securities ventures, fund managers and insurers.

"We will further integrate with internatio­nal trade rules and ease market access," Liu said. "We will further open up the services sector, the financial sector in particular." U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross had a different take on China's free-trade credential­s when he found himself defending U.S. President Donald Trump's "America First" mantra in a panel at the forum.

"The Chinese for quite a little while have been superb at free-trade rhetoric and even more superb at highly protection­ist behavior," Ross said. "Is there really free trade or is it a unicorn in the garden? Every time the U.S. does anything to deal with a problem, we are called protection­ist."

The U.S. seeks to be the leader in making the world trade system fairer and more equitable but leadership "is different from being a sucker and a patsy," he said.

As it pledges further opening, China's top policy imperative is ensuring financial stability. Liu said he wanted to highlight that the buildup of financial risks and Beijing's response to them are "closely related" to changing global markets. "That's why we welcome participat­ion and cooperatio­n of the internatio­nal community in China's endeavor to address financial risk as its part and parcel of global efforts to uphold world economic stability," he said.

He cited a marginally slower credit growth as a positive sign and said China will strive to control the overall debt ratio over three years, echoing earlier pledges by leaders.

 ?? DAVOS
-AFP ?? Steven Mnuchin,, right, arrives for a press briefing during World Economic Forum in Davos.
DAVOS -AFP Steven Mnuchin,, right, arrives for a press briefing during World Economic Forum in Davos.

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