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POLITICAL ECONOMY
China names new heads of financial regulators
by Staff Writers
Shanghai (AFP) Oct 30, 2011


China has appointed new chiefs of its three main financial regulators, state media reported, in a periodic shuffle of officials by the ruling Communist Party.

The moves comes as China struggles with slowing economic growth and persistently high domestic inflation, which has prompted the government to keep a tight grip on credit.

Shang Fulin will become head of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, shifting from his former post as chief of the market watchdog, the China Securities Regulatory Commission, Xinhua news agency reported late Saturday.

Guo Shuqing would take over as boss of the securities regulator. He was most recently chairman of China Construction Bank, one of the nation's top four state banks.

Guo is also a former head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, which helps oversee the country's massive hard currency reserves, now standing at around $3.2 trillion.

Xiang Junbo, another former banker, would take over as head of the China Insurance Regulatory Commission. He was previously chairman of the Agricultural Bank of China, another major state-owned bank.

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Japan's public debt to hit record $13.5 trillion: reports
Tokyo (AFP) Oct 29, 2011 - Japan's public debt is expected to swell to a record $13.5 trillion as the government finances reconstruction efforts after the March earthquake and tsunami, reports said Saturday.

Japan's debt is already the industrialised world's biggest at around twice its GDP, after years of pump-priming measures by governments trying in vain to arrest a long economic decline.

The public debt is expected to reach 1,024 trillion yen ($13.5 trillion) by the end of this fiscal year to March, up 99.75 trillion yen from a year earlier, the Yomiuri daily reported citing, unnamed finance ministry sources.

The national debt will inflate as Tokyo plans to issue bonds worth 11.55 trillion yen to finance the reconstruction measures in the disaster-hit northeast, the Yomiuri and NHK public broadcaster said.

The government spending for the year to March is also expected to swell to a record 106.40 trillion as the series of extra budgets will exacerbate the nation's already tricky fiscal condition.



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POLITICAL ECONOMY
EU bailout fund chief says 'no deal' with China
Beijing (AFP) Oct 28, 2011
China and the head of Europe's bailout fund dampened hopes Friday that Beijing would come to the aid of the debt-stricken EU, but left the door open for a deal with the world's second-biggest economy. Expectations for a strong commitment from China had been high ahead of Klaus Regling's visit to Beijing, with the Financial Times quoting a source saying a cash injection could top $100 billion ... read more


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