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POLITICAL ECONOMY
China manufacturing at year high but worries persist
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) April 1, 2012

East Asian nations agree to double crisis fund
Phnom Penh (AFP) March 30, 2012 - China, Japan, South Korea and the ASEAN bloc have agreed to double the funds available under a regional currency swap pact that can be tapped during financial crises, officials said Friday.

The deal, known as the Chiang Mai Initiative, will grow from $120 billion to $240 billion, giving countries with relatively small foreign exchange reserves a safety net against future liquidity shortages.

The decision to expand the fund was taken on Thursday by finance deputies from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations and their counterparts from China, Japan and South Korea, known as the ASEAN+3 countries, according to a source privy to the discussions.

The meeting was held in the Cambodian capital on the eve of a gathering of ASEAN finance ministers in which they are expected to endorse the decision.

"This will be the firewall of the ASEAN+3 region against further crises," said Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.

He urged the finance ministers "to pay serious attention" to finalising the deal this year, saying it would enhance market confidence in the region's ability to withstand future financial shocks.

The 13 countries are expected to thrash out the details of the agreement when they meet in Manila in May, diplomatic sources said.

East Asia was engulfed by a financial meltdown in 1997 and 1998 and needed substantial bailouts organised by the International Monetary Fund.

Experience from that crisis prompted ASEAN and their economic partners from East Asia to come up with the arrangement -- initiated in the Thai city of Chiang Mai -- in which troubled countries can swap their local currencies for US dollars in times of crises.

Under the current swap arrangement however, 80 percent of the fund comes with conditions determined by the IMF, and only 20 percent can be accessed without IMF guidelines.

But senior Asian Development Bank official Iwan Azis told AFP that finance deputies have agreed to increase the amount that can be used without the IMF conditions to 30 percent.

This will further be reviewed with an eye to increasing it to 40 percent by 2014, said Azis, who heads the ADB's office of regional economic integration.


China's manufacturing activity rose to the highest level in a year in March, official data showed Sunday, but analysts tempered enthusiasm, saying the world's second largest economy was still slowing.

The official purchasing managers index (PMI) rose to 53.1 from 51 in February, helped by an increase in new orders, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said in a statement.

It marked the fourth consecutive month of expansion for manufacturing activity. A reading above 50 indicates expansion, while a reading below 50 suggests contraction.

The latest figure approached a level not seen since March last year, when PMI reached 53.4, previous data showed. The number also beat an average forecast by analysts of 50.5, according to Dow Jones Newswires.

"PMI tends to pick up in March every year... so it is important not to view this as a sign of out-and-out strength," Alistair Thornton, economist for IHS Global Insight in Beijing, said in a research note.

"At the very least, things are not getting worse," he added.

China's economy is widely expected to slow this year as woes in key export markets such as Europe and the United States hit its overseas sales.

The government last month set a target of 7.5 percent economic growth this year. China's economy grew 9.2 percent last year and 10.4 percent in 2010.

Some expect China's economy to have bottomed out in the first quarter, but others say recovery might be delayed until the second quarter.

"Future economic growth will still experience a slowdown," Zhang Liqun, a researcher at government think-tank the Development Research Centre, was quoted as saying in the official PMI statement issued by the industry group.

Analysts said manufacturing activity typically picks up in March with the arrival of spring and following an annual meeting of lawmakers during the month, which sets economic policy for the coming year.

"The government's PMI may have been affected by seasonal factors, so the reality may not be as good," Zhang Zhiwei, chief China economist for Nomura Securities, told AFP.

A separate reading of PMI also released Sunday by British banking giant HSBC showed a less optimistic picture than the official figure.

HSBC's PMI fell to 48.3 in March from 49.6 in February, marking the fifth month manufacturing activity has remained in contraction, the bank said in a statement.

"PMI results confirm a further slowdown of growth momentum," HSBC's chief economist for China, Qu Hongbin, said in the statement.

The HSBC survey puts more emphasis on smaller companies, which are suffering more in the economic downturn than state-owned giants.

The government will still need to loosen credit this year to offset the economic slowdown, analysts said.

ANZ Research said a cut in bank reserve requirements was likely, though the better-than-expected official PMI figure could delay the move to May or June.

The central bank in February cut the amount of cash banks must hold in reserve for the second time in three months as policymakers moved to increase lending and boost domestic consumption amid the economic slowdown.

"We continue to expect cautious, though supportive, monetary policy easing," ANZ said in a research note.

Beijing has pledged to "fine-tune" policy to prevent a hard landing for the economy, which could trigger widespread job losses and spark social unrest.

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Amid protests, Spain aims for $36B cuts
Madrid (UPI) Mar 30, 2012 - Protesters spilled into central Madrid and other Spanish cities to vent their anger at $36 billion of budget cuts the government sees essential to staving off a Greek-style economic meltdown.

Thousands of people joined a general strike, shutting down airports, train services, factories and offices. About 180 people courted arrest in clashes with police that authorities said had left about 200 people, half of them police, injured.

Protesters set debris on fire in Valencia and a Molotov cocktail was thrown at a police vehicle. Attacks on shops in Barcelona caused extensive damage.

Protesters likened their marches to demonstrations in Greece last year before and after the European Union poured billions of euros into rescue packages for that country.

EU and Spanish economists are weighing the next outcome in Spain and whether the cuts will replicate public hardship that critics say has devastated Greek society.

Unlike Greece, which has had frequent economic problems over the past decade, the cutbacks are being received in Spain with shock and horror.

The cuts are likely to be the sharpest and toughest in democratic Spain's history and worse than anything experienced during the postwar dictatorship of Generalissimo Francisco Franco.

When Franco died in 1975, Spain became a constitutional monarchy under King Juan Carlos, and enjoyed relative prosperity before the eurozone crisis gained momentum last year.

Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy says the cutbacks are aimed at helping Spain's recovery and stimulating employment. A 24 percent jobless rate -- the highest in Europe -- is expected to rise further this year.

The government says the cutbacks are "reforms" essential to removing causes of Spain's downturn.

Rajoy is facing pressure from Brussels to reduce the country's budget deficit from 8.51 percent of its gross domestic product last year to at most 5.3 percent this year. Critics point out that goal runs counter to the government's declared aim to stimulate growth and create jobs.

Rajoy hasn't raised Spain's value added tax or cut unemployment benefits and left public pensions untouched. Bur state-sector salaries are to be frozen, the Financial Times said.

EU analysts said the financial downturn in Spain could prove more dangerous for the EU than the problems in Greece and Portugal, both tackled with multibillion-euro bailouts. Spain's troubled but large economy will defy a bailout by EU, already under increasing financial strain.

Despite those fears, eurozone ministers meeting in Copenhagen agreed to increase Europe's bailout reserves from $667 billion to $1.07 trillion. The new limit is short of a $1.3 trillion ceiling opposed by Germany and other member states.



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