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Economist calls for cut in reserve requirement

By Zheng Yangpeng (China Daily) Updated: 2014-05-21 06:44

Property investment, a key component of fixed-asset investment in China, grew by 16.4 percent in the first four months, a further dip from the 16.8 percent expansion of the first quarter. Newly started building construction in the first four months of the year actually slumped by 22.1 percent year-over-year in terms of floor space, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

Economist calls for cut in reserve requirement
Change in banks' cash reserves aimed at boosting agriculture 

Economist calls for cut in reserve requirement

What has vexed Chinese economists is the fact that the decline in interbank borrowing rates in the past month has not yet translated to a softening of the long-term borrowing rate. Many observers have noticed the paradox between China's ample money supply and persistent high borrowing rate.

Zhu said several factors contributed to it. A major reason, he said, is that too many large enterprises in the steel, metal, coal and chemicals - sectors with overcapacity - as well as local government financing vehicles eat up too much credit.

Burgeoning wealth management products and online financial products are competing with commercial banks for household deposits, pushing up the cost for banks to get the deposit. The interest rate liberalization process also has taken a toll, according to Zhu.

Regulations linking banks' loan ability with their deposit reserve, which forced banks to grab deposits at the end of a quarter or a month, has exacerbated the matter, he said.

Addressing structural problems, such as gradually eliminating overcapacity, strengthening oversight on online financial products and relaxing the stringent loan-to-deposit ratio, is critical to bringing down borrowing costs, Zhu said.

But as these reforms take time, more flexibility in monetary policy could ease the problem in the short term, he said.

 

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