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POLITICAL ECONOMY
China inflation eases but still a challenge
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 9, 2011

China should rein in risky 'non-banks': IMF
New York (AFP) Sept 8, 2011 - China's booming economy has given rise to a murky, unregulated system of "non-banks" that will pose risks unless it is brought under tighter regulation, a top IMF official said on Thursday.

This non-bank system -- which includes trusts, insurance companies and the inter-corporate lending market -- has grown rapidly since 2009, said Nigel Chalk, the International Monetary Fund's mission chief for China.

"There's a whole informal financial market, where rates are very high for corporates who can't get credit in the normal system, and that's very non-transparent," Chalk said.

"It's very hard to figure out what is going on there, even how big it is and what effect it is having on the economy," he told an audience at the New York headquarters of the Asia Society, a non-profit organization.

Chalk drew a line between China's regulated, largely state-owned banking system and the shadowy world of non-banks.

China should boost supervision of its non-banks to avoid problems that the United States suffered during the 2008 financial crisis, when a breakdown in the "shadow" banking system caught regulators by surprise, he said.

Beijing has "moved extremely quickly and very effectively on banking regulation.... The regulation of the non-bank financial system, though, is much more problematic," Chalk said.

"We saw that in the US, when we had a shadow banking system that was very difficult to regulate and to understand how it was working and how it linked into the rest of the economy."

The United States bailed out several non-banks as a result of the financial meltdown, most notably the insurance giant AIG, which since 2008 has received more than $180 billion from the US government, mostly from the Federal Reserve, to cover its losses and liabilities.

The crisis pushed AIG to the brink of bankruptcy because of a complex web of derivative contracts it had entered with various financial companies, largely outside the oversight of US regulators.

China said Friday its politically sensitive inflation rate softened in August, but analysts warned that price pressures would continue to trouble the government just as world demand slackens.

The National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) also said output from China's factories and workshops rose 13.5 percent year-on-year in August -- slower than in July -- amid concerns the economy is slowing while prices rise.

Authorities in the world's second-largest economy have been struggling to tame inflation, which they fear could cause more unrest after recent public protests as living costs spike for many millions.

Slightly easing concerns, the NBS said the consumer price index (CPI) -- the main gauge of inflation -- rose 6.2 percent in August, down from a more than three-year high of 6.5 percent in July.

The government has implemented a number of measures over the past year to try to slow inflation, including restricting the amount of money banks can lend and hiking interest rates five times since October.

Analysts said these policies appeared to have had an impact, but warned that inflation -- while expected to drop -- was still likely to remain elevated.

"We are assured it is a peak for this year but any falling back would be very slow," said Yao Wei, a Hong Kong-based economist with Societe Generale.

"CPI is likely to stay above five percent for a long period of time, which is not good news for the central bank."

The government had originally set a target of four percent for inflation in 2011, but China's Premier Wen Jiabao has reportedly admitted it will be difficult to keep CPI within that target.

He said in June that fighting rising prices remained a priority and hoped to keep the level under five percent with "hard work".

Mounting public anger over rising food and fuel prices has already caused a series of protests in China this year, fuelling concerns about inflation.

Foodstuffs account for more than one-third of the monthly spending of the average Chinese consumer. According to the NBS, year-on-year food price rises in August slowed to 13.4 percent from 14.8 percent the previous month.

"Overall, we expect price pressures to ease over the next three to six months," Brian Jackson, senior emerging markets strategist at the Royal Bank of Canada, told AFP.

"But today's is only one month's data. Inflation could bounce back. There's a chance they might tighten policy further if inflation doesn't slow as fast as they'd like."

Analysts said hopes that the government might relax its monetary policy due to the August CPI reading were premature.

"The information we got from top-level officials recently is that this chance is very small," said Liu Hongke, a Beijing-based economist with CCB International, part of China Construction Bank.

"They will not relax monetary policy before there is an obvious slowdown in inflation."

Yao at Societe Generale said she expected the government to adjust some of the measures it has implemented to tame inflation, such as lowering the amount of money some individual banks must keep in reserve.

"But we believe cutting the overall level of reserve requirements or interest rates is unlikely in the short term," she said.

Other data released Friday showed retail sales, the main gauge of consumer spending, jumped 17 percent in August while fixed asset investment, a measure of government spending on infrastructure, rose 25 percent in the first eight months of 2011.

As the United States and Europe stare at fears of another recession after the 2008 financial crisis, analysts said policymakers in export-reliant China were going to have to manoeuvre very carefully.

"They are faced with a weakening external environment and a policy-driven domestic slowdown that heightens calls for a loosening, even as elevated inflationary pressure reduces the space available for that loosening," said Alistair Thornton, China analyst at IHS Global Insight.

"The next six months are going to require some extremely skilled economic driving."

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Chinese army general under fire for son's violence
Beijing (AFP) Sept 9, 2011 - A Chinese army general has apologised for his son's brutal beating of a couple and offered compensation, state media said Friday, in the latest scandal involving the so-called "rich second generation".

The case, which has sparked widespread outrage, is reminiscent of a high-profile scandal last year, when the son of a police officer tried to use his father's status to escape the scene of a deadly car accident he had caused.

According to the official Global Times paper, police detained Li Tianyi, 15, Tuesday in Beijing after witnesses said he and a friend leapt from their sports cars and beat a man and woman for three minutes while their son looked on.

Li reportedly has no driving licence and his car, a customized BMW coupe, had no licence plate. But a lawyer told the English-language daily that he would not be charged because he was not yet 16 years old.

The woman who was beaten up by Li and the other boy, surnamed Su, told the newspaper that her husband had to get nine stitches on his forehead and two on the back of his head, and that he sustained injuries to his nose and right eye.

General Li, 72, a famous singer and music department dean at the Beijing-based PLA Academy of Arts, apologised for his son's actions.

"As the father, I bear the responsibility for my son's behaviour. I'm so sorry that I'd rather now be beaten by you," he was quoted as saying.

"I will not condone my son's faults, and there will be a settlement."

Police in Beijing's Haidian district, where the incident occurred, were not immediately available for comment.

Witnesses said that Li and Su beat up the couple in what appeared to be an act of road rage.

"Who will dare call the police?" they shouted to stunned onlookers before trying to flee the scene. They were stopped by local residents, the report said.

The incident has sparked lightning-fast online calls to punish Li, amid disgust over what some see as the brazen high-handedness of top officials and their families.

In last year's scandal, the 22-year-old police officer's son ran over a student in the northern province of Hebei and infamously shouted: "Sue me if you dare. My father is Li Gang!" He was later sentenced to six years in prison.

Both cases have sullied the reputation of China's "rich second generation" -- a term applied to the spoiled offspring of powerful beneficiaries of China's 30-year economic boom.





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