Special
Report: Global Financial Crisis
BEIJING, May 6 (Xinhua) -- China's central bank said
Wednesday the economy is doing "better than expected" in the first quarter, and
pledged to maintain "ample" liquidity in the financial system for economic
recovery.
China would stick to its moderately easy monetary
policy and ensure "ample" liquidity at banks, the People's Bank of China (PBoC)
said in its quarterly monetary policy report posted on its website.
The country has pumped 4.58 trillion yuan (670
billion U.S. dollars) of new loans into the economy in the first quarter to
stimulate growth.
The figure is already nearing 5 trillion yuan of new
loans targeted for the whole year. In March alone, new loans increased by a
record 1.89 trillion yuan.
The country's financial institutions and enterprises
would digest the huge amount of new loans in the following months, the report
said.
Industry insiders have said credit extended by
China's banks in April may have dropped to above 600 billion yuan after staying
at above 1 trillion yuan for three straight months.
The central bank said new lending from commercial
banks focused on government-backed projects. It encourages more bank loans to be
channeled to small and medium-sized enterprises as they play an important role
in the national economy and in increasing employment.
The central bank said in the first-quarter monetary
policy report it would continue to instruct financial institutions to extend new
loans, despite the earlier surge.
The pick-up in bank lending is conducive to stabilize
the financial market and boosting market confidence, PBoC said. Meanwhile, the
bank urged lenders to improve credit quality to avoid a possible rebound in bad
loans.
There have been "positive changes" in the economy in
the first quarter, the bank said, echoing remarks made by Premier Wen Jiabao
last month.
The quarter-on-quarter growth is improving, compared
to the fourth quarter of last year, it said, without giving specific figures.
China's economy expanded 6.1 percent in the first
quarter, the lowest pace in 10 years and down from 9 percent in the fourth
quarter last year.
The central bank also said foundations for the
recovery are not solid, as uncertainties in external economies still exist and
private investment is yet to become active with new lending concentrated on
government projects.
In listing uncertainties ahead, the bank said the
country still has to battle against the financial crisis that is unfolding and a
collapse in external demand that is hurting exports.
The country is also under great pressure to create
enough jobs and from a slower growth in residents' income, which would suppress
future consumption, it said.
The bank also warned overcapacity and insufficient
demand may drive prices lower in the country with the world economy in a
downturn.
But it also said continued falls in prices may become
less likely along with the world recovery, a turnaround in the national economy
and fast credit growth.
"Prices of primary products and assets may rebound
quickly once investor confidence is restored, as the global credit is relatively
loose thanks to injection of liquidity and stimulus packages across the world,"
the bank said.
The central bank also said it was concerned that the
extraordinary monetary policy adopted by other major economies would result in
inflation risks.
It referred to the quantitative easing policy adopted
by the U.S., Japan, Britain and Switzerland to pump cash into their economies.
The quantitative easing policy meant increasing
currency supply through purchasing mid- and long-term treasury bonds after
central banks cut interests rates to near zero.
The extraordinary monetary policy harbored huge risks
for international financial markets and the global economy, said the central
bank.
It would increase the risk of global inflation, said
the central bank, suggesting it would create new assets bubbles and inflation if
central banks of major economies failed to mop up thehuge liquidity when the
global economy recovered.
"A policy mistake made by some major central banks
would put the whole world in risk of inflation," it said.
The quantitative easing policy would also make
exchange rates of major currencies more volatile, according to the report.
The central bank cited the U.S. move to purchase
treasury bond in March as an example, saying although the dollar had appreciated
against other major currencies, it fell after the purchase.
PBoC said the policy would leave the bond markets
subject to fluctuations.
It said massive purchase of mid- and long-term
treasury bonds may keep yield at a low level. But in the long run, as the
financial markets returned to stability and the economy recovered, inflation
expectations would grow, interest rates would rise, and bond prices would adjust
sharply, according to the report.
Senior Chinese official urges proper
implementation of stimulus
packages
BEIJING, May 6 (Xinhua)
-- The Communist Party of China's top discipline supervisor He Guoqiang has
urged stepped-up supervision of projects falling into the government's economic
stimulus package.
He, secretary of the CPC Central Commission for Discipline
Inspection, made the remark during a two-day meeting from May 5 to 6 here. Full story
