The Borneo Post

China eyes infrastruc­ture boost to cushion growth as trade war escalates

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BEIJING: China plans to put more money into infrastruc­ture projects and ease borrowing curbs on local government­s to help soften the blow to the economy from the Sino-US trade war, policy sources told Reuters.

China’s trade war with the US has clouded the outlook for the world’s second-largest economy and roiled financial markets. A sharper slowdown in the Chinese economy could fuel job losses, a concern that Beijing has raised.

But Chinese leaders have ruled out another round of strong fiscal stimulus, wary of inflaming debt risks. A four trillion yuan (US$590 billion) spending package in 2008 to 2009 shielded China’s economy from the global crisis but saddled local government­s and state firms with piles of debt.

The amount of infrastruc­ture spending this time will depend on how the trade war evolves, said four sources who are familiar with government policy. The sources are involved in internal policy discussion­s but are not part the final decision-making process.

“In the short term, the most effective way is to boost infrastruc­ture investment,” said one policy insider who advises the government, speaking on condition of anonymity. “We will let fiscal policy play a bigger role in supporting the economy as monetary policy is less effective.”

The economy has already felt the pinch from Beijing’s multiyear deleveragi­ng drive that has driven up corporate borrowing costs and delayed government projects.

Economic growth slowed slightly to 6.7 per cent in the second quarter - still above the official 2018 growth target of around 6.5 per cent.

However, the trade row with Washington, a slowing domestic property market and reduced outbound shipments have sharply increased the risks to China’s economic outlook.

Earlier this month, the US imposed tariffs on US$34 billion of Chinese imports. China promptly levied taxes on the same value of US products, leading US President Donald Trump to threaten to tariffs on all USUS$500 billion of goods imported from China.

China’s infrastr ucture investment growth tumbled to 7.3 per cent in the first half from 21.1 per cent a year earlier – dragging fixed-asset investment growth to a record low – due to due to stricter checks on investment projects to curb debt risks.

Fiscal policy will become ‘more proactive’, China’s cabinet said after a meeting on Monday, pledging to deliver more tax cuts and quicken the issuance of local government­s’ special bonds to support infrastruc­ture investment.

The meeting, chaired by Premier Li Keqiang, also called for banks to ensure funding to existing projects and meet reasonable funding needs of local government financing vehicles (LGFVs), which have been subjected to tight official scrutiny. Room for fiscal outlays

Room for boosting fiscal outlays is ample. Government spending surpassed revenues by 726 billion yuan in the first half, which was only about a third of the budgeted deficit of 2.38 trillion yuan for 2018.

China has cut its annual budget deficit target to 2.6 per cent of gross domestic product from three per cent in 2017 – the first reduction since 2012, boosting the amount of special bond issuance by local government­s by 550 billon yuan to offset the drop.

“Fiscal spending could be quickened and investment in some projects under constructi­on will be expedited. This will provide support for the economy,” said a second policy insider.

Another policy insider said China can step up spending on much-needed urban facilities such as parking lots and retirement homes, instead of mega projects.

The finance ministry, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters’ request for comment. Policy debate

The cabinet’s policy move signaled a victory for the PBOC following debate among researcher­s from the PBOC and finance ministry on whether fiscal policy should do more to spur growth, the policy insiders said.

That could take some heat off the PBOC, as it faces difficulty in channeling credit to small firms, which are vital for economic growth and job creation, they said.

State banks remain reluctant to lend to small firms, which are considered riskier than statecontr­olled firms.

The PBOC has cut banks’ reserve requiremen­ts three times this year, with further reductions widely expected. But aggressive policy easing could re-ignite debt risks and weigh on the weakening yuan, sparking capital outflows.

While authoritie­s are seen pushing ahead with reducing debt, there have been some signs of softening in their stance.

Chinese policymake­rs have recently replaced use of the term ‘deleveragi­ng’ with “structural deleveragi­ng”, a change that suggests less harsh curbs on debt.

“The deleveragi­ng should consider external changes and the intensity could be weakened to avoid having a big impact on the economy,” said one of the policy sources. — Reuters

 ??  ?? China plans to put more money into infrastruc­ture projects and ease borrowing curbs on local government­s to help soften the blow to the economy from the Sino-US trade war, policy sources told Reuters. — Reuters photo
China plans to put more money into infrastruc­ture projects and ease borrowing curbs on local government­s to help soften the blow to the economy from the Sino-US trade war, policy sources told Reuters. — Reuters photo

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