China unveils new measures to boost growth amid trade war with US

The onshore yuan fell as much as 0.65 per cent to 6.8295 per dollar, the lowest level since June 2017

US China trade war, US , China, tariff hike, donald trump, Chinese goods, wto, world trade organisation,  US tariff hikes, global trade war, American goods
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Bloomberg Shanghai/ Beijing
Last Updated : Jul 24 2018 | 11:27 PM IST
China unveiled a package of policies to boost domestic demand as trade tensions threaten to worsen the nation’s economic slowdown, sending stocks higher.
 
From a tax cut aimed at fostering research spending to special bonds for infrastructure investment, the measures announced late Monday following a meeting of the State Council in Beijing are intended to form a more flexible response to “external uncertainties” than had been implied by budget tightening already in place for this year.
 
Fiscal policy should now be “more proactive” and better coordinated with financial policy, according to the statement — a signal that the finance ministry will step up its contribution to supporting growth alongside the central bank. The People’s Bank of China has cut reserve ratios three times this year and unveiled a range of measures for the private sector and small businesses.

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With the economic impact of reciprocal tariffs on trade with the US as yet unclear and no end to the trade dispute in sight, policy makers are pulling multiple levers to stabilize the economy. For now, that’s being done without resorting to large-scale stimulus or broad—based monetary easing, as officials remain committed to a multi-year campaign to curb debt growth.

 
“I don’t think there is a significant easing or a policy U-turn; it’s more of a fine-tuning,” said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Securities in Hong Kong. “Policy makers are sewing patches, offsetting the deleveraging drive that was too rapid and fierce.”
 
The onshore yuan fell as much as 0.65 per cent to 6.8295 per dollar, the lowest level since June 2017. Stocks in Shanghai and Hong Kong advanced.
‘Proactive’ policy
  • Measures ranged from a tax cut aimed at fostering research spending to special bonds for infrastructure investment
  • Fiscal policy should now be “more proactive” and better coordinated with financial policy, the State council said
  • China will strike a balance between easing and tightening and keep liquidity “reasonable and sufficient”

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