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Central bank's current challenges

2010-12-03 16:49

Monetary base is smaller than it appears but sterilization may need to continue to control inflation and asset prices

Not long after the United States Federal Reserve Board announced its second round of quantitative easing (known as QE2), the People's Bank of China, China's central bank, announced two increases of 0.5 percentage points in the required reserve ratio (RRR) of bank deposits. The RRR now stands at 18.5 percent, a historic high, even in global terms.

While the Fed is planning to pump more money into the US economy, the People's Bank of China is trying to reduce the amount of money in circulation. Money used by commercial banks to satisfy the RRR, which is held in accounts at the central bank, can no longer be extended as loans. As a result, more money than ever is now frozen or inactive in China.

It is understandable that the Fed wants to boost demand as long as the US economy remains depressed. But why has the central bank tightened monetary policy so much? China's economy is not over-heating. Growth is still high, at about 10 percent per year, but it has started to moderate. And, while inflation is a concern - having risen to 4.4 percent year-on-year in October, up from 3.6 percent in September - this cannot explain why the central bank raised the RRR three times earlier this year, when inflation was lower.

Instead, the central bank's policy is preemptive: sterilize over-liquidity and get the money supply under control in order to prevent inflation or over-heating. At the beginning of the year, the RRR increases could be regarded as part of efforts to correct the over-supply of money that arose from the anti-crisis stimulus package. But the most recent RRR increases mainly serve to sterilize the "passive money supply" caused by the increase in foreign-exchange reserves.

Indeed, in September alone, China's foreign-currency reserves increased by almost $100 billion compared to August. With the global economy recovering, China's trade surplus began to grow. Moreover, capital inflows increased significantly, owing to real investment opportunities in the high-growth economy and the expectation of renminbi revaluation.

But rapid growth in foreign-exchange reserves means an increase in the domestic money supply, because the central bank issues 6.64 yuan (down 3 percent since June) for every dollar it receives. That means that money supply increased by nearly 700 billion yuan in September. The two 50-basis-point RRR increases just locked up the same amount of liquidity.

A country with current-account and capital-account surpluses and increasing foreign-exchange reserves normally sees excessive money supply and high inflation. But, while excessive money supply is a reality for China - the central bank now holds more than $2.6 trillion in foreign reserves - inflation has been quite moderate so far, thanks to the sterilization policy.

The RRR is only one example of a textbook sterilization instrument. Another is to sell government bonds held by the central bank in order to take money out of circulation - again, just the opposite of what the Fed is now doing. Because China's government does not owe much debt to the public, the central bank sold out its holdings of government bonds in 2005. So it had to create something else to sell.

Its creation this time is so-called "central bank bills", which commercial banks are supposed to buy voluntarily. When they do, the money they pay is also locked up in the central bank's accounts. To date, up to 5-6 percent of total liquidity has been returned to the central bank in this way.

Furthermore, the central bank uses unconventional instruments from time to time, such as "credit ceilings" or "credit quotas" imposed on commercial banks. This may result in "extra reserves", which commercial banks cannot use to extend their credit lines. Credit quotas imposed early this year have left Chinese commercial banks with 2-3 percent of extra reserves.

Adding up the impact of the central bank's sterilization efforts, roughly one-quarter of China's total monetary base is illiquid. Thus, although China's total money supply seems excessive, with the M2-to-GDP ratio now at about 190 percent, the real monetary base is actually much smaller than it appears. As a result, China's inflation, as well as asset prices, remains under control.

How long will this sterilization continue, and how far will it go? At what point will higher RRR levels cause Chinese commercial banks to begin running losses?

There may be room for further sterilization. First, unlike in some other countries, China's commercial banks are paid reasonable interest rates on required reserves, except for the "extra reserves" that they hold. So they do not lose much, if anything, from the central bank's sterilization policies.

Second, China's central bank still controls interest rates by enforcing a roughly three-percentage-point spread between deposit rates and lending rates. As a result, China's commercial banks can operate longer with a higher RRR than their counterparts elsewhere.

One key issue facing China is how to reduce the current- and capital-account surpluses in order to reduce foreign-exchange holdings. Yes, further revaluation of the exchange rate is needed, but this can play only a secondary role.

The most important task for China is to reduce the high saving rate. A number of fiscal, social security, and tax reforms should be a priority for this purpose.

But it seems that both revaluation and reform will take time. Meanwhile, the causes of global imbalance on the US side also seem unlikely to disappear any time soon. And now, with the Fed's QE2 on the table, conditions may worsen before they improve. The central bank of China may have to continue its sterilization for some time in the foreseeable future.

Fan Gang is professor of economics at Peking University and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, director of China's National Economic Research Institute and secretary-general of the China Reform Foundation.

Project Syndicate.

 

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