Central bank calls for reins on lending (Xinhua) Updated: 2006-08-03 07:03
A report from the People's Bank of China has warned that unrestrained lending
growth will continue to fuel economic overheating unless it is controlled.
An exchange store
staff counts Chinese RMB banknotes in Hong Kong May 16, 2006.
[Reuters] | The report suggested measures to curb
the excessive growth of total lending, starting with raising the reserve
requirement of commercial banks by a 0.5 of a percentage point from August 15.
The measures also included more flexible open market operations, more
emphasis on using interest rates as a leverage, and more policy guidance.
Despite the government's macro-economic controls and stringent monetary
policy, money supply jumped rapidly, noted the central bank.
By the end of June, M2 supply surged by 18.4 percent year on year to 32.3
trillion yuan (4.1 trillion US dollars), and M1 supply by 13.9 percent to 11.2
trillion yuan, two percentage points higher than the same period last year.
M1 is an antecedent index for national economic performance, reflecting the
change in the amount of money in the hands of residents and enterprises, while
M2 shows the demand of the whole of society and indicates possible inflation.
Local currency lending at the end of June soared by 15.2 percent to 21.5
trillion yuan, two percentage points higher than the same period last year, said
the central bank.
Inter-bank trading remained buoyant, and the inter-bank interest rate rose
moderately along with the tightening of monetary policy, the report said.
Three factors contributed to the lending surge.
The booming economy had buoyed up credit demand, while commercial banks
enjoyed abundant capital to lend due to increasing liquidity and the widening
gap between savings and lending.
Thirdly, commercial banks were paying more attention to returns and earnings,
thus having more incentive to lend in a bid to profit, said the central
bank.
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