A senior Chinese finance official called on the world on Saturday to oppose 
the rising protectionism and promote progress in the Doha Round. 
 
 
 |  People's Bank of China 
 Deputy Governor Hu Xiaolian, left, and IMF First Deputy Managing Director 
 John Lipsky, right, attend the International Monetary and Financial 
 Committee meeting, April 14, 2007, in Washington. [AP]
 
  | 
Hu Xiaolian, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China, said that all 
countries should make efforts to create a favorable globalization environment in 
which all countries may participate on an equal and beneficial footing. 
"With trade protectionism pressures growing, measures taken by certain 
countries --under the pretext of righting global imbalances -- will hinder the 
trade liberalization process," Hu said at the spring meetings of the IMF and the 
World Bank. 
"We call on all countries to harness the opportunities created by 
globalization, pursue timely structural readjustments, resolutely oppose 
protectionism, promote progress in the Doha Round," she said. 
Hu, who attended the meetings on behalf of Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of 
China's central bank, also welcomed the IMF's efforts to strengthen surveillance 
in safeguarding global financial stability and promoting the economic prosperity 
of its members. 
"We have noted the efforts to strengthen Fund surveillance since the 
Singapore Meetings, including through possible revision of the 1977 Decision on 
Surveillance over Exchange Rate Policies," she said. 
"In this regard, we wish to emphasize that, first, revision of the Decision 
should not proceed too hastily," she said. "In making adequate and careful 
analysis, the Fund must take the opinions of all concerned parties into account 
and build broad consensus among all member countries to ensure that it would 
benefit them all." 
Second, in strengthening surveillance, the Fund should be realistic, and not 
overestimate, the role of exchange rate, Hu said. 
"Biased advice would damage the Fund's role in safeguarding global economic 
and financial stability," she said, while emphasizing that the focus of 
surveillance should be consistent with the purposes laid out in the Fund's 
Articles of Agreement. 
"Due respect should be paid to the fundamental role of sustaining growth in 
promoting external stability. External stability can only contribute to overall 
sustained stability when anchored by domestic stability," she concluded. 
Also Saturday, Hu Xiaolian said that China's economic growth model has 
undergone welcome changes and its economy will continue on path of steady and 
fast growth. 
"The Chinese economy is projected to remain on a fast growth track -- 
exceeding 8 percent in real terms -- in 2007," she said, adding that the 
government will give more emphasis to the quality and sustainability of economic 
growth. 
She also said the reform of the China's foreign exchange regulatory framework 
has steadily deepened. "The RMB exchange rate formation mechanism is being 
improved and flexibility of the RMB exchange rate has increased significantly," 
she said.