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China faces 'big' uncertainties: World Bank chief
29 Sep 2009, 0321 hrs AGENCIES
WASHINGTON:
China faces major uncertainties even though it rebounded strongly from the latest financial crisis aided by its huge treasure chest,
World Bank President Robert Zoellick said on Monday.
"China's future is not yet determined," he said even though the Asian giant effectively pump primed its huge economy and used various monetary polices to weather the crisis that plunged the world into recession.
Noting that China's rapid recovery was fuelled by an expansion of credit, he said "this flood is now easing, and authorities are likely to limit it further for fear of effects on asset prices, asset quality, and eventually general inflation."
Credit expanded at a red hot pace of 26 percent of China's gross domestic product (GDP) in the first eight months of 2009 and last month, the stock market slumped partly due to concerns that banks had been ordered to rein in aggressive lending.
"China still faces big uncertainties in 2010," Zoellick told a Washington forum of the Johns Hopkins University.
29 Sep 2009, 0321 hrs AGENCIES
WASHINGTON:
China faces major uncertainties even though it rebounded strongly from the latest financial crisis aided by its huge treasure chest,
World Bank President Robert Zoellick said on Monday.
"China's future is not yet determined," he said even though the Asian giant effectively pump primed its huge economy and used various monetary polices to weather the crisis that plunged the world into recession.
Noting that China's rapid recovery was fuelled by an expansion of credit, he said "this flood is now easing, and authorities are likely to limit it further for fear of effects on asset prices, asset quality, and eventually general inflation."
Credit expanded at a red hot pace of 26 percent of China's gross domestic product (GDP) in the first eight months of 2009 and last month, the stock market slumped partly due to concerns that banks had been ordered to rein in aggressive lending.
"China still faces big uncertainties in 2010," Zoellick told a Washington forum of the Johns Hopkins University.