China’s central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said the world’s second-largest economy has scope compared with other nations to ease its monetary policies though won’t necessarily take advantage of it.
“We have room in the reserve ratio and our interest rates are not zero yet,” Zhou, 67, said in a brief interview Saturday in Washington, where he was attending the International Monetary Fund’s spring meetings. “There is definitely room. But we need to adjust carefully. It doesn’t mean we will have to utilize it or fully utilize the room.”
Banks including Macquarie Group Ltd. and HSBC Holdings Plc flagged the need for further stimulus after China’s economy expanded last quarter at the slowest pace since 2009 and industrial-production gains in March were the slowest since November 2008. An economy-wide inflation indicator turned negative last quarter for the first time since 2009, suggesting room for easing.
Premier Li Keqiang last month said policy makers will step in to support the economy if jobs and wages are hurt by the slowdown, while Zhou previously said the nation needs to be vigilant about deflation risks and policy makers have “room to act.”
China is battling a property slump, excess industrial capacity, local-government debt and capital outflows, with the economy last year expanding at the slowest pace since 1990. The nation is among at least 30 countries that have loosened monetary policy this year as lower commodity prices give room to stimulate.
Gross domestic product rose 7 percent in the three months through March from a year earlier, while industrial production last month increased by 5.6 percent, after a 6.8 percent rise in the first two months of the year.
In a statement at the meetings in Washington taking place from Friday until yesterday, Zhou said that while China’s economic expansion is slowing, it’s still within a “reasonable range” and employment growth remains stable.
He reiterated that China will pursue “prudent” monetary policy and said it will adjust “adaptively” according to the economy and inflation, according to the statement posted on the PBOC’s website.
One hurdle that may curb the extent of any monetary stimulus is China’s surging stock market, which took off after the central bank cut interest rates in November. Another may be reticence to reignite debt risks and a repeat of the 2009 stimulus binge.
Zhou and the Chinese government have been pressing the IMF to include the yuan in its Special Drawing Rights basket of currencies regarded as global reserve currencies. IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde has said that “we welcome and share this objective.”
Zhou, in Saturday’s interview, declined to speculate on when the yuan, also called the renminbi, would be added to the basket.
The IMF this week indicated it may be abandoning its long- held view that the Chinese exchange rate is undervalued.
“The market should be the judge of the renminbi’s value rather than us,” Zhou said. Bonnie Cao, Bloomberg
Zhou says China has room for monetary easing; may not use it
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