The Philippine Star

Xi confidant emerges as front runner to head China’s central bank

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BEIJING (Reuters) – Liu He, a Harvard-trained economist who is a trusted confidant of Chinese President Xi Jinping, has emerged as the front runner to be the next governor of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), according to three sources with knowledge of the situation.

Liu may be in a position to become one of China’s most powerful economic and financial officials ever, as he is already top adviser to Xi on economic policy and is also expected to become vice premier overseeing the economy.

Liu would replace current PBOC chief, 70-year-old Zhou Xiaochuan, who is China’s longest-running head of the central bank, having taken the job in 2002. Zhou is expected to retire around the time of the annual session of parliament in March, sources previously told Reuters.

The change would be part of a wider government reshuffle following the 19th Communist Party Congress in October last year, during which Xi laid out his vision for China’s long-term developmen­t, and elevated his key allies.

Speculatio­n has been rife for months over the choice of the next central bank governor. Xi will have the final say, and the sources noted that while Liu is clearly the frontrunne­r he is not yet certain to get the job.

The PBOC and the State Council Informatio­n Office (SCIO), the government’s public relations arm, did not immediatel­y respond to faxed requests for comment.

Just before last October’s Congress, sources told Reuters that China’s banking regulator head Guo Shuqing and veteran banker Jiang Chaoliang were leading contenders for the PBOC job.

But at the congress, the influence of the 66-year-old Liu continued to grow. He was elected into the 25-member Politburo, the secondhigh­est tier in Beijing’s political power structure after the seven-member Politburo Standing Committee.

Sources previously told Reuters that Liu, a fluent English speaker, is set to become one of China’s four vice premiers and would oversee the economy and financial sector.

Two of the sources said that Liu could serve concurrent­ly as vice premier and head of the central bank.

Only Zhu Rongji in the early-1990s had held both the posts of vice premier and central bank governor simultaneo­usly. Zhu later went on to become China’s premier from 1998-2003.

The leadership reshuffle at the PBOC is closely watched in global financial markets as monetary policy changes and any moves to further liberalize the financial system of the world’s second-largest economy would have repercussi­ons well beyond China’s shores.

Liu’s appointmen­t would mean the central bank would continue to be led by a “national leader,” which could reinforce its policy influence, stability and financial oversight powers.

Zhou has spearheade­d financial reforms and boosted the yuan currency’s global clout, as well as the central bank’s policy influence.

But unlike western central banks, the PBOC does not have the final word on adjusting interest rates and the value of the yuan.

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