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China grapples with money supply as inflation soars
Friday, January 21, 2011
The Chinese authorities face an uphill task to reduce excess liquidity and ease inflationary pressures for the second time in three years. During the tightening campaign of 2007 and 2008, the People’s Bank of China lifted the banking sector’s reserve requirement ratio by eight percentage points to 17½ per cent and implemented a 135-basis point increase in benchmark lending rates.
Food price inflation already exceeds 10 per cent with little sign of retreat but unlike 2007 – when disruptions in the food supply chain, primarily blue-ear disease and the resulting surge in pork prices, were the primary culprit behind the acceleration in the inflation rate – the uptick this time round is also apparent in non-food prices.
Hot Money:
Speculative capital inflows are already thwarting the People’s Bank of China’s efforts to control the money supply and quantitative easing in the US has added fuel to the fire.
Dr. Jian Tianlun, a former employee of PBOC and currently an economist in the U.S., believes that the Chinese authorities were compelled to raise the interest rate.
“The sudden interest hike now shows that either their decision then was based on political concerns, or that their understanding about the economic situation has now changed. Now that they feel a greater pressure of inflation, they are then forced to raise the interest rate.”
The higher the interest rate, the higher the revaluation pressure on the Yuan.
Jian speculated that perhaps the communist regime found that inflation was getting out of control, and was therefore forced to raise interest rates.
Rates Up
Jian believes inflation will go even higher in 2011. “This is for sure. The NDRC has already set a higher target for inflation. This indicates that the regime has anticipated higher inflation for 2011 and it’s quite possible that inflation will be uncontrollable.”
.
Friday, January 21, 2011
The Chinese authorities face an uphill task to reduce excess liquidity and ease inflationary pressures for the second time in three years. During the tightening campaign of 2007 and 2008, the People’s Bank of China lifted the banking sector’s reserve requirement ratio by eight percentage points to 17½ per cent and implemented a 135-basis point increase in benchmark lending rates.
Food price inflation already exceeds 10 per cent with little sign of retreat but unlike 2007 – when disruptions in the food supply chain, primarily blue-ear disease and the resulting surge in pork prices, were the primary culprit behind the acceleration in the inflation rate – the uptick this time round is also apparent in non-food prices.
Hot Money:
Speculative capital inflows are already thwarting the People’s Bank of China’s efforts to control the money supply and quantitative easing in the US has added fuel to the fire.
Dr. Jian Tianlun, a former employee of PBOC and currently an economist in the U.S., believes that the Chinese authorities were compelled to raise the interest rate.
“The sudden interest hike now shows that either their decision then was based on political concerns, or that their understanding about the economic situation has now changed. Now that they feel a greater pressure of inflation, they are then forced to raise the interest rate.”
The higher the interest rate, the higher the revaluation pressure on the Yuan.
Jian speculated that perhaps the communist regime found that inflation was getting out of control, and was therefore forced to raise interest rates.
Rates Up
Jian believes inflation will go even higher in 2011. “This is for sure. The NDRC has already set a higher target for inflation. This indicates that the regime has anticipated higher inflation for 2011 and it’s quite possible that inflation will be uncontrollable.”
.