BEIJING - China cannot rule out further interest rate hikes in the coming
months, state press have reported, citing a leading central bank advisor.
The possibility of rate hikes cannot be ruled out given
the need to maintain curbs on investment and credit growth, the 21st Century
Business Herald cited central bank advisor Fan Gang as saying Sunday.
People cross a street at a busy shopping district in the
Kowloon area of Hong Kong, October 2006. China cannot rule out further
interest rate hikes in the coming months, state press have reported,
citing a leading central bank advisor.[AFP]
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Fan, advisor to the People's
Bank of China, added the pressure for rate hikes was not strong, with inflation
at just over 1 percent compared with 4-5 percent in 2004 and 6 percent in early
2005, the paper said.
In August, the central bank announced its second interest rate hike in less
than four months in an effort to slow the nation's economy, which continued to
race ahead at a double-digit pace.
Following the 0.27 percentage point hike, the lending rate reached 6.12
percent and the deposit rate 2.52 percent.
China's gross domestic product growth slowed to 10 percent in the third
quarter, from 11.3 percent in the second, after a slew of tightening measures
introduced by the government to rein in investment growth and tighten controls
on land use.
China's consumer price index rose 1.4 percent year-on-year in October this
year, and 1.3 percent in the January-October period.
Fan said China should raise interest rates as soon as the economy shows signs
of overheating.
The newspaper said that in the past, boycotts by big state-owned companies,
securities firms and other groups had posed obstacles to interest rate
adjustments.
Fan stressed the central government must employ administrative measures to
control growth in investment at the local government level, the report
said.