China will maintain a
prudent monetary policy in 2007, said central bank governor Zhou
Xiaochuan in his New Year address.
The central bank will strengthen foreign exchange
management this year and push forward financial reforms to maintain
the stability of the financial system, said Zhou.
He said the bank had striven to restrict the growth of
monetary credit to a reasonable level last year and had sped up the
reform of state-owned commercial banks.
According to the People's Bank of China (PBoC),
Chinese banks lent 2.97 trillion yuan (US$380.76 billion) in the
first 11 months last year, far above the government's target of 2.5
trillion yuan. Total new loans for 2006 will reach the highest
level since 2003.
The monetary policy commission of the PBoC said at a
recent meeting that in the first few months of 2007, China should
restrict loan growth to a reasonable pace and optimize loan
structure.
Last year, the central bank improved the yuan exchange
rate formation mechanism and kept the yuan exchange rate floating
in a disciplined manner within a reasonable range, said
Zhou.
The value of the Renminbi, or Chinese yuan, has risen
nearly 3.86 percent since China's reform of the exchange rate
system on July 21, 2005.
A Xinhua Economic Analysis Report released on Monday
predicts the exchange rate of the Chinese currency will appreciate
by some 5 percent against the US dollar in 2007 to reach 7.44
yuan.
Monetary policy aims to stabilize RMB prices but also
to expand domestic consumption, prevent investment from growing too
fast, and promote a more balanced international payment situation,
according to the PBoC commission.
(Xinhua News Agency January 4, 2007)
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