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REPEAT: MNI IVIEW: China '18 GDP May Beat Target: Govt Advisor

MNI (London)
Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 10:39 GMT Jul 26/06:39 EST Jul 26
--Stimulus Policies To Underpin China's Economic Growth
By Iris Ouyang
     BEIJING (MNI) - China may report higher-than-expected GDP this year as the
government's stimulus policies will buttress the domestic economy, which is
slowing amid a trade spat with the U.S., an advisor to China's economic planning
department said in an interview with MNI.
     "The 'around 6.5%' GDP target will certainly be met, and the whole-year
growth will be higher than 6.5%," Xu Hongcai, deputy chief economist at the
China Center for International Economic Exchanges, an advising body run by the
National Development and Reform Commission, told MNI.
     --GDP ABOVE TARGET
     According to Xu, GDP could hit 6.6% in the second half on stronger
consumption and higher investment growth. Consumption growth would be boosted in
part by increased car sales on the back of reduced tariffs.
     Increased infrastructure spending, along with stable property investment in
the second half, will help underpin the overall investment outlook in the second
half, Xu said.
     Trade growth could be less favorable as the trade conflict with the U.S.
gathers pace, but industrial output would remain stable, he said.
     --SLOWER DELEVERAGE
     As Chinese authorities are now appearing keen to take a pro-growth stance,
Xu said GDP growth in the second half may be buoyed by a slowing of its
deleveraging campaign which aims to rein in shadow banking and excess borrowing.
     "The pace of deleveraging would certainly be slower in the second half than
the first half, which will offset some downward risks and stabilize economic
growth," Xu said. "But deleveraging would only slow slightly, it doesn't mean
China will stop their efforts."
     "China is sticking firmly to the deleveraging campaign because it reduces
potential risks in China's economy," Xu said, "But the strength and pace of the
structural deleveraging should be controlled according to actual situations."
     --FURTHER RRR CUTS
     China regulators have recently moved to ease restrictions and the People's
Bank of China (PBOC) injected cash via a record-high medium-lending facility
loans to ease liquidity pressure.
     "These policies are only minor adjustments, which has not changed the
prudent and tight regulation tone," Xu told MNI. They are aimed to give the
markets positive signals and help restore calm through the China-U.S. trade
tensions, Xu added.
     Monetary policy needs to be flexible to an adequate degree reflecting
slower deleveraging, Xu stressed, adding M2 growth and social financing growth
would be accelerated in the second half.
     The PBOC may cut banks' reserve requirement ratio (RRR) one or two times in
the second half, each time 0.5 percentage point, he said. Xu added the policies
should help with financing of small- and medium-sized enterprises,
micro-businesses and agricultural sector.
     However, he didn't see the central bank altering the benchmark rate.
     In order to implement the more proactive fiscal policy announced by the
government earlier this week, authorities are likely to further reduce corporate
tax rates, he said. Increasing salaries for civil servants and raising the
private-sector minimum wage to boost consumption are other options, Xu said.
     Additionally, local government financing restrictions could be loosened to
speed up infrastructure investment, Xu noted. Both lifting some quotas for local
government bond issuance and decreasing restrictions on local government
financing vehicles are possible methods, he added.
--MNI Beijing Bureau; +86 (10) 8532-5998; email: iris.ouyang@marketnews.com
--MNI London Bureau; tel: +44 203-586-2225; email: les.commons@marketnews.com
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com
MNI London Bureau | +44 203-865-3812 | les.commons@marketnews.com

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