By Bloomberg News - 2012-07-21T12:44:36Z
Chinaâs growth may slide to 7.4 percent this quarter from a year earlier, an adviser to the nationâs central bank said, underscoring Premier Wen Jiabaoâs warning that the economyâs difficulties may âpersist for a while.â
The possibility of a âshort periodâ of deflation in the worldâs second-largest economy canât be ruled out, Song Guoqing, an academic member of the Peopleâs Bank of China monetary policy committee, said at a forum in Beijing today.
Chinaâs expansion slowed to 7.6 percent in the three months ending June, the sixth straight deceleration, as Europeâs fiscal crisis sapped exports and a crackdown on property speculation curbed domestic demand. Wen said the momentum for a recovery in growth isnât yet in place, according to a July 15 Xinhua News Agency report, and warned two days later that the labor situation will become more âsevere.â
âThe slowdown in growth could worsen in the second half if Beijing is not decisive in unwinding some outdated tightening measures and carrying out effective stimulus,â Lu Ting, a China economist at Bank of America Corp. in Hong Kong, said in a July 19 note. The government should introduce measures equivalent to 1 percent of gross domestic product, about 470 billion yuan ($74 billion), âto fill the gap generated by slowing exports and fixed-asset investment,â he wrote.
The government will be âprudentâ with any stimulus, Song said at todayâs forum held by Peking Universityâs China Center for Economic Research.
âPrudence can be good as it can avoid big swings,â Song said. âBut in an economic slowdown it may also lead to insufficient measures.â
Signs of weakening domestic demand include falling factory- gate prices and softening inflation. The producer price index dropped 2.1 percent in June from a year earlier, the fourth straight decline, while consumer prices rose 2.2 percent, the smallest increase since January 2010.
âDeflation is already a fact for the corporate world,â Song said.
Angang Steel Co., Chinaâs largest Hong Kong-traded producer of the alloy, said July 6 that it probably swung to a loss in the first half after prices plunged. The cost of steel fell this month to the lowest in two years.
Moderating inflation has given the central bank more room to ease monetary policy. It announced the second reduction in interest rates in a month on July 5 and has lowered the proportion of deposits banks must set aside as reserves three times since it started cuts in November to boost lending.
The central bank is âvery likelyâ to further cut banksâ reserve-requirement ratio, Song said today, without saying when he expects an announcement. It is âvery difficult to make a forecastâ on interest rates as the PBOC needs to look at âtiming and conditions,â he said.
--Zhou Xin. Editors: Nerys Avery, Linda Shen
To contact the reporter on this story: Xin Zhou in Beijing at xzhou68@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net
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