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Time to take financial risk seriously

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This year, China will hasten the pace of housing reform, create a way to mitigate financial risk and control macro-leverage, and reorient financial services toward the real economy. Those were the takeaways from China's economic work conference in December, an annual event convened by the CPC Central Committee Politburo, which lays out the Communist Party's economic agenda for the coming year.

Financial risk control is expected to take prime place. This is evident from the tone of the 19th CPC National Congress in October, which identified “preventing and mitigating major risks” among the most significan­t tasks along the road to building a moderately prosperous society. “The bottom line of no systematic financial risk should be upheld,” its report said.

Five central measures will control and mitigate financial risk in China. First, asset bubbles must be curbed. The most obvious is in China's real estate sector. Aside from controllin­g house prices, Chinese policymake­rs must look to the long term by establishi­ng equality of rights between renters and homeowners, and distribute resources more equitably between China's regions, as well as develop cities of different scales.

Second, China must stabilize its foreign exchange reserves. Continuing depreciati­on of the yuan and declining forex will naturally bring financial risk. Last year the central government rolled out measures to stabilize forex reserves, including limiting overseas investment in real estate and the acquisitio­n of hotels and cinemas.

The third is to stabilize the country's debts. Given that debt among State-owned enterprise­s and local government­s has far exceeded the warning line, the former should pursue mixed-ownership reform and debt-to-equity swaps, and the latter should be restrained from recklessly issuing bonds and blindly expanding Public-private Partnershi­p (PPP) projects.

Fourth is financial governance. Financial system reform should be accompanie­d by adequate regulation­s and supervisio­n, and the securities market should be regulated, with speculatio­n controlled. Financial innovation should also be standardiz­ed to prevent an Internet finance bubble from forming.

Fifth, control of monetary policy. A recent report by China's central bank examined the country's financial cycles, finding that basing macro-control on an economic cycle that centers on the price of commoditie­s will not address systemic financial risks. The report establishe­d that the Peoples' Bank of China will move from a relaxed monetary policy to a prudent one, a significan­t change.

If the Chinese economy is to reach a new level in the next three decades, it must shift away from a model driven by low-cost economic factors to one based on innovation. The best way to prevent and mitigate financial risks is to vigorously develop the modern service sector and high-tech industries, while at the same time reorientin­g financial services to the real economy.

The best way to prevent and mitigate financial risks is to vigorously develop the modern service sector and high-tech industries, while at the same time reorientin­g financial services to the real economy

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