Growth in China's money supply maintained a rapid pace in July
due to the continuing jump in loans and the trade surplus, despite
the central bank's tightening measures to curb fast-growing
lending.
The growth of the broad money supply, or M2, which covers cash
in circulation and all deposits, climbed 18.4 percent year-on-year
to 32.4 trillion yuan (US$4 trillion) by the end of July, according
to a statement from the People's Bank of China on Friday.
The growth rate was almost the same as that of last month. But
it was up 2.1 percentage points compared with the same period of
last year.
"The continuing hike of the M2 may be triggered by the banks'
rush to give out loans before August 15 when their deposit reserve
ratio will jump by 0.5 of a percentage point," said Wang Yuanhong,
a senior economist with the State Information Centre.
The central bank has taken a package of measures to mop up
excess liquidity in the market, including twice raising commercial
banks' required reserve ratios by half a percentage point within
five weeks and increasing the one-year benchmark lending rate by 27
basis points to 5.85 percent in April.
"However, given the July statistics, these measures didn't work
as well as expected," said Wang, adding the country's target for M2
growth this year is 16 percent.
The M1, an indicator covering cash in circulation and current
account deposits, rose by 15.3 percent year-on-year to 11.27
trillion yuan (US$1.4 trillion) by the end of July, according to
the central bank. The growth rate is 1.4 percentage points higher
than that of last month and up 4.3 percent from a year ago.
The outstanding renminbi loans in all financial institutions
stood at 22.94 trillion yuan (US$2.87 trillion) at the end of July,
an increase of 15.4 percent year-on-year. The rate is 1.1
percentage points higher than that at the end of June.
According to Li Yongsen, an economist at Renmin University of
China, the ever-increasing foreign exchange reserve is a major
factor behind the dynamic growth of the money supply.
China's foreign exchange reserve, driven by the mounting foreign
trade surplus and the inflow of foreign direct investment, had
surged to a record US$941.1 billion by the end of June, according
to statistics from the central bank.
The trade surplus widened to US$14.6 billion in July, the
highest on record, the Ministry of Commerce said on Wednesday.
"It is very hard to say that the central bank will further
increase the lending interest rate soon since the consumer price
index, a key indicator for inflation, rose only 1 percent
year-on-year in July," Wang said.
The exchange rate of the yuan is becoming more flexible, said
the central bank. The yuan has gained an accumulated 3.8 percent
since the government revalued it and discarded its peg on the
greenback on July 21 last year.
(China Daily August 12, 2006)