Special Report: NPC, CPPCC Annual Sessions 2007
BEIJING, March 12 (Xinhua) -- The fluctuating prices
on China's fledgling stock market recently are not a macroeconomic problem and
should not lead to any major change of trends, said the country's central bank
governor in Beijing on Monday.
"I personally believe this is
not a problem on the macroeconomic level and should not lead to any major change
of trends," said Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank of China, at a
press conference held on the sidelines of the annual full session of the Chinese
parliament.
Asked whether he agrees that the Shanghai stock
market should be held responsible for triggering the drastic fall of the global
market at the end of February, Zhou made no direct comment but acknowledged that
globalization is making stock markets around the world more and more
"interrelated".
"China used to believe that its (stock) market is a
comparatively small market, a market still under construction and in its early
years, or a newly-established market gradually growing in a shifting economic
system," said Zhou.
"However, due to the development of economic
globalization, there has been a close interrelation of fluctuations on different
stock markets. This tells us that we need to speed up the development of the
Chinese market," he added.
The governor said that China should further increase
the ratio of direct fund raising and step up efforts to make its capital market
"better and more internationalized."
The Shanghai Composite Index fell 8.8 percent to
2,771.79 on Feb. 27, the biggest single-day percentage fall in a decade, which
some people said had affected markets in the rest of Asia, Europe and the United
States. Market prices had kept fluctuating in the following trading days.
Zhou also conceded that China is faced with the
problem of excessive liquidity in its financial system, but stressed that
excessive liquidity is a "global phenomenon."
"The same problem is faced by the United States,
which has a huge financial deficit, and those oil-producing countries with a
rich capital reserve," said Zhou.
"All macro-economic regulatory bodies should pay high
attentionto this problem and adopt prudent and adequately stringent policies
regarding the excessive liquidity," he added.
But the governor said he didn't believe excessive
liquidity would have direct impact on a specific capital market, including the
stock market and real estate market, on a specific date.
"We shall see that the market is very complicated and
there area host of reasons for its fluctuation," he said.