BEIJING: China’s central bank fanned expectations of further monetary policy easing, saying in its latest quarterly report that inflation pressures are “controllable,” while highlighting risks to the economic growth outlook.
The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) largely reiterated its stance of stable policy, pledging to make it more forward-looking and effective, while maintaining ample liquidity.
The surge in producer inflation in the first half was likely temporary, and the domestic recovery is not yet solid, it said.
The fast-spreading Delta virus variant is restricting travel and spending in parts of China, prompting some economists to downgrade their growth forecasts for the world’s second-largest economy.
Many of them are predicting another reduction in the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for banks after July’s surprise cut, while a few are forecasting lower interest rates as well.
China Daily cited economists in a report yesterday saying the PBoC’s remarks could be a signal that it’s preparing to cut the RRR again or even lower policy rates.
Among those quoted are Zhang Bin of the state-affiliated think tank Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
In the quarterly report, the PBoC vowed to avoid flooding the economy with stimulus and to support it with appropriate growth in money supply.
“Overall, it points to the likelihood of additional RRR cuts in coming months, particularly since there is limited inflation pressure in China consumer prices,” said Alvin Tan, head of Asia currency strategy at RBC Capital Markets in Hong Kong.
The PBoC said inflation pressure is “controllable” because it normalised money supply since May 2020, ahead of major economies.
On the other hand, the current surge of inflation in the United States is a result of extreme easing of monetary and fiscal policies, which made the expansion of monetary supply much faster than nominal economic growth, it said.
Some analysts said the report’s heavy focus on inflation suggests the PBoC remains cautious about excessive easing.
The window for a policy rate cut may have already closed, said Ming Ming, head of fixed-income research at Citic Securities Co.
Fiscal spending will likely be the mainstay of policy support in the second half, he said in a note yesterday.
While the policy stance is unlikely to change significantly in the short term, easing will likely come when the property and export sectors show further weakness, Haitong Securities Co Ltd economists led by Liang Zhonghua said in a note yesterday.
“The surge in producer price index is most likely to be temporary,” the PBoC said. “It may persist at a high level in the short term but will probably fall back as the base effect fades and global supply production recovers.”
In the long term, the decline in labour productivity and the ageing population will suppress inflation, while goals to promote green energy will push up prices. These two opposite forces will end up stabilising overall prices, the central bank said.
The PBoC reiterated it will keep monetary policy prudent and increase the autonomy of macro policies. It will decide the pace and magnitude of policy based on the domestic economy and price trends, it said.
Its surprise move to cut the RRR, or the amount of cash banks must park at the central bank, was a “forward-looking” action to stabilise liquidity that took into consideration factors including tax payment season, maturing policy loans and faster local government bond issuance, the PBoC said. — Bloomberg