China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Local govt spending to stabilize growth

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Local government spending will play a major role in stabilizin­g China’s economy, depending on the speed of issuing special debt instrument­s when companies slow investment­s, according to economists.

The 661.3 billion yuan ($94.47 billion) in renminbi-denominate­d new loans in October, the lowest level in nearly three years, indicated a weaker fund demand especially in non-financial companies, in line with the further dip in production prices, according to data from the central bank and the National Bureau of Statistics.

To stabilize growth, provincial­level local government­s have proposed new quotas of the special purpose bond, which is a debt instrument especially to raise capital for infrastruc­ture constructi­on. Local government­s are waiting for the approval by top-level policymake­rs, some experts close to the Ministry of Finance told China Daily on Tuesday.

Some economists expected that the total quota of additional special bond may exceed 1 trillion yuan and that figure is nearly half of the total special bond quota in 2019. An executive meeting of the State Council said in September that a part of the special bond quota will be issued in advance, without specifying the time.

Investors in the financial market have expected for a long time that the additional quota could be released before the end of this year. The 2019 annual local government bond quota had been almost used up by October, and the slowdown in bond issuances has constraine­d the growth of the total social financing.

Wang Zecai, a senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Fiscal Sciences, said that local government­s have taken targeted measures to stabilize economic growth.

“According to the legal procedures, (local government­s) plan to issue a part of the 2020 new special bond quota in advance, to increase investment in infrastruc­ture and public services as early as possible. It will be significan­t to achieve the economic stabilizat­ion target at the beginning of the next year,” said Wang.

The People’s Bank of China reported on Monday that the incrementa­l amount of total social financing, which includes off-balance sheet forms of financing that exist outside the convention­al bank lending system and the local government special bond, decreased to 618.9 billion yuan last month, compared with 2.27 trillion yuan in September and 737.4 billion yuan in the same month of 2018.

For the central bank, the rising consumer inflation recently driven up by pork prices has restrained the monetary policy. But the dropping production prices, indicated by a negative Producer Price Index, require a “structural adjustment” of monetary policy to further reduce bank lending costs to companies, said Sheng Songcheng, the former head of the PBOC statistics and analysis department.

Compared with cutting the reserve requiremen­t ratio (RRR), to lower the rate of the medium-lending facility (MLF) or the loan prime rate (LPR) would be more efficient,” said Sheng, who is against adopting a deluge of strong stimulus monetary policy measures.

When the consumer inflation is rising and companies are hesitating to borrow to expand investment, the macroecono­mic policy will focus more on fiscal side, which means the government spending will play a major role, according to economists.

“A combinatio­n of fiscal policy and the exchange rate policy is expected,” said Wu Ge, chief economist at Changjiang Securities. He said that the general interest rate level may hardly be lowered given the rising inflation, but stronger infrastruc­ture constructi­on may drive up the total social financing moderately in the coming months.

 ?? ZHANG YUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ?? A cashier counts currency at a bank outlet in Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi province.
ZHANG YUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE A cashier counts currency at a bank outlet in Taiyuan, capital of Shanxi province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States