A senior central bank official said China should step up the pace
of the opening of the banking sector to both foreign banks and
domestic private investors.
Some of the smaller commercial banks are looking for private
investors, and the Big Four State banks also need to start bringing
in qualified strategic investors, said Yi Gang, deputy
secretary-general of the Monetary Policy Committee of the People's
Bank of China, at a seminar organized by the China Centre for
Economic Research at Peking University over the weekend.
Yi
said China should further open the banking industry to domestic
investors, who see foreigners getting investment advantages in the
sector as China puts its World Trade Organization promises into
practice.
The non-State sector has made essential contributions to China's
economic growth and has provided many employment opportunities, yet
they are largely denied access to the financial sector and that
should be changed, Yi said.
Yi
said he was cautiously optimistic about China's economic prospects.
He predicted China's economic growth rate could reach 7.5 per cent
this year and said he was hopeful that the consumer price index, a
barometer for inflation, would be pulled out of negative
territory.
China has been facing lingering deflationary pressure since the
second half of last year, with all three major price indices
negative at present.
Of
course, China still has to tackle problems of slow rural income
growth, urban unemployment, social security and the reform of
State-owned enterprises, said Yi.
But domestic demand should be boosted by the continuing fiscal
expansion. And fixed asset investment should be fuelled by the
State plans to issue another 150 billion yuan (US$18 billion) in
government bonds this year, said Yi.
He
said China's foreign trade would also grow by 10 per cent in
2002.
Recovery of the US economy would improve China's exports in the
second half of the year.
Martin Feldstein, president of the US National Bureau of Economic
Research and a professor at Harvard University, said that the US
economy is facing a very strong recovery and should grow by 3.5 to
4 per cent in the second half of the year.
That will be based on increasing consumer spending and strong
productivity growth.
Feldstein said he has "real confidence" in the Chinese Government's
ability to deal with current problems and its input of resources
into the agricultural sector. He rebutted the view of a possible
economic breakdown in China seen by some Western media.
(China Daily July 2, 2002)
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