Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

7% growth goal never set in stone: China PM

- Reuters letters@hindustant­imes.com

BEIJING: China has never said the economy must grow 7% this year, Premier Li Keqiang said in comments reported by the government ahead of a key meeting this week that will set economic and social targets for the next five years.

Li’s comments coincide with remarks by a top central bank official, who said on Saturday that China would be able to keep annual economic growth at around 6-7% over that period. The statements come at a time of growing concern in global financial markets over China’s once mighty economic juggernaut (see graphic).

China cut interest rates for the sixth time in less than a year on Friday. Monetary policy easing in the world’s second-largest economy is at its most aggressive since the 2008-09 financial crisis, as growth looks set to slip to a 25-year-low this year of under 7 %.

China’s economy grew 6.9% in the July-to-September quarter from a year earlier.

Li also said the economic difficulti­es ahead for China should not be underestim­ated.

His report to the annual meeting of Parliament set this year’s GDP growth target at about 7%.

“We have never said that we should defend to the death any goal, but that the economy should operate within a reasonable range,” the central government paraphrase­d Li as saying in a statement released on its website late on Saturday.

Chinese leaders will signal that growth is their priority over reform by setting a growth target of around 7% in the next longterm plan, policy insiders say.

The party’s central panel will meet from Monday to Thursday to set out the 13th Five-Year plan.

The party’s People’s Daily on Sunday listed on its microblog what it said were 10 focus areas for the Five-Year Plan, including maintainin­g economic growth, improving the industrial structure and pushing forward innovation. It gave no details. Neverthele­ss, while the focus is on growth, China is still moving ahead on financial reforms.

Besides cutting interest rates on Friday, the People’s Bank of China said it was also freeing the interest rate market by scrapping a ceiling on deposit rates.

The change, which Beijing had promised to deliver for months, will in theory allow banks to price loans according to their risk, and remove a distortion to the price of credit that analysts say fuels wasteful investment in China.

It should also offer some reassuranc­e to financial markets after they were unsettled by the chaotic responses to the country’s recent stock market plunge and then a yuan devaluatio­n.

The deposit rate reform builds on the introducti­on of deposit insurance, creating space for smaller banks to compete with bigger rivals. It is seen as a longterm step toward a more marketdriv­en banking sector, if smaller banks lend funds to parts of the economy shunned by large banks.

 ??  ?? WHY CHINA IS RATTLING THE WORLD A look at China’s exports and imports to different countries in 2013
(Figures in $ billion)
Source: NYT; Photo: Shuttersto­ck
Export
Import
521 401 312 274 198 161 136 106
90
90
WHY CHINA IS RATTLING THE WORLD A look at China’s exports and imports to different countries in 2013 (Figures in $ billion) Source: NYT; Photo: Shuttersto­ck Export Import 521 401 312 274 198 161 136 106 90 90
 ??  ?? Li Keqiang: optimistic
Li Keqiang: optimistic

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