News Letter
Weather
Community
English home Forum Photo Gallery Features Newsletter Archive   About US Help Site Map
China
World
Opinion
Business
Sci-Edu
Culture/Life
Sports
Photos
 Services
- Newsletter
- News Archive
- Feedback
- Weather Forecast
 Search
Advanced
 About China
- China at a glance
- Constitution
- CPC & state organs
- Chinese leadership
- Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping

Home >> Business
UPDATED: 14:05, June 25, 2004
Central bank moves towards "healthy" Chinese economy
font size    

The People's Bank of China posted Sunday night a plan to raise commercial banks' reserve requirement at the central bank to 7.5 percent from seven percent beginning April 25, in a move to clamp down on fast growth of money supply and credit which is posing challenges for a healthy economic growth.

The decision had been approved by the State Council, China's cabinet, and would apply to the country's "Big Four" state-owned banks, 11 joint-stock banks and more than 100 urban and rural commercial banks among other financial institutions. However, thousands of rural and urban credit cooperatives would be able to continue with the existing six percent standard, the central bank said in a statement.

A 7.5-percent reserve requirement means that commercial banks should keep 7.5 percent of their deposits in the central bank in preparation for management of future operation risks. Only the remaining deposits can be used by commercial banks to lend.

The higher reserve ratio will "freeze" approximately 110 billion yuan (13.3 billion US dollars) in commercial banks' liquidity, according to the statement.

The central bank said China's economy, the world's sixth largest, was now facing such thorny problems as further swelling investment demand, money and credit growth and mounting pressure from inflation.

"The 0.5-percentage-point reserve hike is largely to prevent runaway growth of money and credit and keep the national economy expanding on a steady, fast and healthy track," it said.

Fast credit growth could be in tandem with inflation or "asset price bubbles", emergence of new non-performing loans at commercial banks and accumulation of financial risks, the People's Bank pointed out.

The statement said financial institutions' reserves at the central bank now exceed 2 trillion yuan (241 billion dollars).

The People's Bank of China vowed to maintain the current "stable" monetary policies while making "precautionary and minor" adjustments to help the economy grow. China has set a seven percent economic growth target for 2004, compared with 9.1 percent last year.

Source: Xinhua

Print friendly Version Comments on the story Recommend to friends Save to disk


   Recommendation
- China Forum
- PD Newsletter
- People's Comment
- Most Popular
 Related News
- Money supply grows at faster pace in 2003: central bank

- PBOC ponders bank reserves

- China's central bank raises rate for Banks


Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved