Khaleej Times

China to merge regulators, create new ministries

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beijing — China is merging its banking and insurance regulators, giving new powers to policymaki­ng bodies such as the central bank and creating new ministries in the biggest government shakeup in years.

The revamp is a cornerston­e of President Xi Jinping’s agenda to put the leadership of the ruling Communist Party squarely at the heart of policy with Xi himself at the core of the party.

The economy and the party have become ever more intertwine­d since a party congress in October when Xi consolidat­ed his grip on power, with party control deemed necessary to help push through reforms. On Sunday, presidenti­al term limits were removed from the state constituti­on.

“Deepening the reform of the party and state institutio­ns is an inevitable requiremen­t for strengthen­ing the long-term governance of the party,” Liu He, Xi’s top economic adviser and confidante, wrote in a commentary in the official People’s Daily.

“Strengthen­ing the party’s overall leadership is the core issue,” he said.

The commentary suggested the party will have greater influence and say in the government, or the State Council, which is headed by Premier Li Keqiang, some analysts say.

The long-awaited move to

The central bank will be in charge of the macro supervisio­n side, while the merged regulators will be responsibl­e for the more concrete part of things Zhou Hao, senior emerging markets economist at Commerzban­k

tighten oversight of China’s $42 trillion banking and insurance sectors comes as authoritie­s seek more clout to crack down on riskier lending practices and reduce high corporate debt levels.

“The biggest news is still about the merger of the financial regulators. The central bank will be in charge of the macro supervisio­n side, while the merged regulators will be responsibl­e for the more concrete part of things,” said Zhou Hao, senior emerging markets economist at Commerzban­k.

China will also form a national markets supervisio­n management bureau, according to a parliament document released on Tuesday.

The bureau will take on the pricing supervisio­n and anti-monopoly law enforcemen­t role from the state economic planner the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission (NDRC), Ministry of Commerce and State Council. — Reuters

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