The required reserve ratio for financial institutions engaging in deposit
business will be raised by 0.5 percentage points from Feb. 25 to 10 percent, the
second hike in two straight months, sources with China's central bank said in
Beijing yesterday.
This moderate increase shows that the People's Bank of China (PBC) had shied
away from using drastic moves to absorb liquidity as the country's consumer
price index, the measure for inflation, grew by only 2.2 percent in January,
down 0.6 percentage points from the previous month, observers said.
The reserve ratio hike, the fifth of its kind since last July, was made to
deal with "dynamic currency liquidity changes and to consolidate macro-economic
controls", said the central bank in its latest statement.
The statement said that imbalanced international payment generated by
mounting trade surplus had resulted increasing currency liquidity and made
another reserve ratio hike necessary.
China's central bank lifted deposit reserve ratio by the same margin of 0.5
percentage points on Jan. 15, which was estimated to take 150 billion yuan (18.8
billion U.S. dollars) out of the banking pool.
However, some economists argued that an interest rate hike was inevitable, as
reserve ratio adjustments and open market operations had proved ineffective in
curbing excess liquidity.
Official data revealed that the newly-added renminbi-denominated loans
amounted to 567.6 billion yuan (about 74.7 billion U.S. dollars) in January,
basically equivalent to last January but twice as much as last year's monthly
average.
The outstanding renminbi-dominated loans amounted to 23.1 trillion yuan in
January, up 16 percent year-on-year. The growth rate was 0.9 percentage points
higher than the end of last year and up 2.2 percentage points from last January.
Yin Zhongli, an expert with the Financial Research Institute of the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, called the move "an expected expedient."
"This won't be the last reserve ratio hike of the year. Meanwhile, interest
rate rises are far from the best tool to absorb liquidity, " he said.
Economist Han Zhiguo contended that an advisable way was to facilitate the
development of capital market and allow stock markets to play a bigger role.
The central bank reiterated in its Friday statement that it would "adopt a
prudent monetary policy, tighten the management of bank liquidity and facilitate
the rational growth in monetary credit."