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China's central bank stresses inflation management amid credit boom

2009-11-12 08:08 BJT

BEIJING, Nov. 11 (Xinhua) -- China's central bank said on Wednesday that it will step up efforts to balance inflation perception and economic growth as it will continue to implement the relatively easy monetary policy.

"We will make the policy more flexible and sustainable and keep policy abreast with economic climate and price changes," the People's Bank of China said in the latest quarterly report of monetary policy on Wednesday.

As the economy is on the road to recovery with easy credit, we will closely watch the price changes and keep them stable in the long run, it said.

Chinese banks lent a record 8.92 trillion yuan (1.31 trillion U.S. dollars) in the first ten months, far exceeding the 5-trillion yuan annual target, to fuel the economic recovery.

Credit expansion slowed to a year-low in October as the new yuan loans shrank to 253 billion yuan (37.06 billion U.S. dollars) from 516.7 billion yuan a month earlier, as corporate demand cooled down after the lending spree.

The report said the nation's stimulus package implemented since last November had held back price falls and eased deflation fears. However, the loose credit conditions across the globe also pushed up commodity and asset prices, which shaped "a certain perception for inflation".

The central bank noted it will keep the credit growth at a "reasonable" pace and make it "sustainable and balanced".

The report also said investment project should be "reasonably" planned, and private business should be given more support.

Market should play a bigger role in the resource allocation to make the economic growth dependent on its own vigor other than outside forces, said the report.

Background:

Banks lend 253 bln yuan in loans in Oct.

China's central bank also released monetary supply figures for October. Looking at the figures banks extended 253 billion yuan in new loans last month. The figure is less than half of the 516 billion yuan in September. Full story >>

Market reaction:

Market watches new loan figures

China's Central Bank also released monetary supply figures for October, which draws a lot of attention. Let's take a closer look at why the market is so concerned about the figure. Full story >>

Editor: Xiong Qu | Source: Xinhua