A senior policy maker stressed
Thursday China should continue its deleveraging process this year, while
highlighting the necessity of tackling obvious yet easy to neglect dangers in
the economy.
"The course of deleveraging cannot be altered," Yang Weimin,
"The course of deleveraging cannot be altered," Yang Weimin,
deputy head of the Office of the Central Leading
Group on Finance and Economic Affairs, the country's top economic policy-making
office, said at a press conference.
High leverage is "the source
of risks" and authorities should not allow the economy's leverage ratio to
climb further for the sake of supporting growth, Yang told reporters.
He named several areas where
systemic risks could arise from, including interbank investment and financing,
local government debt and state-owned enterprise (SOE) debt, calling for early
measures to deal with them.Left unaddressed, those problems
could cause greater damage to the economy, Yang warned.
The relationship between supporting
growth and preventing risks must be well handled, even if that means other
goals would be compromised, he said.
He also noted that deleveraging and
growth could be achieved at the same time, as demonstrated by China's economic
performance in the first half of the year.
China's quarterly GDP growth
increased from 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2016 to 6.9 percent in the
first two quarters of this year while the country imposed tighter controls on
debt and financial activities.
China has put deleveraging of SOEs
high on its agenda, according to a key national financial work conference
earlier this month.
SOEs are responsible for about 60
percent of the country's total corporate debt, according to a report from the
National Institution for Finance and Development.
The SOEs' high leverage is also
among several "grey rhinos" that China should watch out for, Yang
said, referring to high-impact, highly probable yet neglected threats to the
economy.
Unlike "black swans",
which are unpredictable incidents, "grey rhinos" are big problems
with signs but often draw inadequate attention and lead to serious
consequences.
Authorities should comb through
such "grey rhinos", which also include shadow banking, real estate
bubble, local government debt and illegal fundraising, and take effective
measures to address them in accordance with their gravity and urgency, Yang
said.
In the second half of the year,
China will defuse local government debt risks in a proactive and steady manner,
advance financial regulation, stabilize the property market, and support
foreign investment inflows and private investment, he said.
(www.chinaview.cn)
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