China growth could halve if Europe
crisis worsens - IMF
(Reuters) - China 's
annual economic growth could be cut nearly in half this year if Europe's debt
crisis tips the world economy into a recession, putting pressure on Beijing to unveil
"significant" fiscal stimulus, the International Monetary Fund said.
The Fund outlined its central
scenario for China 's
2012 growth outlook in its global outlook in January, cutting its forecast for
2012 growth from 9 percent to 8.2 percent.
The China Economic Outlook published on Monday
showed that under the IMF's "downside" forecast for the global
economy, China 's
growth rate may be cut by around 4 percentage points from the fund's current
forecast of 8.2 percent in 2012.
"In the unfortunate event such a downside
scenario becomes reality, China
should respond with a significant fiscal package, executed through central and
local government budgets," it said.
Stimulative measures could include cuts in
consumption taxes, subsidies for consumers, corporate incentives to expand
investment, fiscal support for smaller firms and more spending on low-cost
housing social safety nets, the fund said.
Such fiscal stimulus, adding up to 3 percent of
GDP, would help mitigate declines in economic output, it said.
A Reuters poll in January showed China 's
economic growth is likely to moderate to 8.4 percent from 2011's 9.2 percent as
demand at home and abroad slackens.
Falling inflation will enable the People's Bank
of China to fine-tune policy to support growth through its open market
operations in the coming weeks, the IMF said. It said the central bank could
opt to cut banks' reserve requirement ratio again if capital inflows remain
subdued.
The central bank announced a cut in the amount
of cash that banks have to hold as reserves -- the first such cut in three
years -- at the end of November. More reserve ratio cuts are expected in coming
months.
(Reporting by Kevin Yao; editing by Patrick
Graham)
No comments:
Post a Comment