Posted on 05 March 2011. Tags: budget deficit, China, Chinese, finance, Finances, inflation, interest rates
Fighting the inflation is a key economic priority for China this year because the government aims to limit the risk of social unrest, Prime Minister Wen Jiabao in a speech to the country conditions.
“We can not afford the price increases to affect the normal life of people with low incomes,” said Wen in the report the annual meeting of The Chinese meeting of MPs in Beijing today. “This problem affects the welfare of the people has common interests and concerns social stability.”
The 64-year-old Wen confirmed targets 4 percent inflation for the whole year and 8% growth against attempts by the Communist Party to provide support for the 61-year rule. Over the past two weekends government sent hundreds of police in Beijing and Shanghai after the Internet calls for protests, inspired by bunks in the Middle East and North Africa.
“Inflation has the potential to trigger social unrest,” said Liu Li-Gang, an economist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group in Hong Kong. The government should increase interest rates on loans and deposits by 0.75 percentage points by year’s end, and to raise wages and to grant aid the poor, he said.
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Posted in Asian Finances
Posted on 30 November 2009. Tags: China, Chinese, Japan, Japanese, Market, markets, MSCI, Nikkei 225, Pacific region, securities, South Korean
Today’s session brought indexes in Asia and the Pacific region, the strongest decrease their day for the past eight months, but ended the week with a painful decline in most markets in the region. Stood at the head Japanese, Chinese and South Korean securities market, which lost between 4% and 6% of its market capitalization over the past five trading sessions. Reason for mass sales became the news of the failure of the Dubai government investment holding company Dubai World to meet its obligations to creditors. The Fund has a debt for 59 billion dollars, equivalent to most of Dubai’s foreign debt to 80 billion dollars. Meanwhile, the Japanese yen rose to its highest rate against the dollar since 1995. Financial difficulties of the Dubai World stocks fell on banks and insurers in the region, led by HSBC Holdings, whose shares fell nearly 8 percent. This is due to investor concerns about exposure of large international banks to fund Dubai. Construction companies also suffered because of the activity of the Dubai World in the construction sector. The regional index MSCI Asia Pacific, which brings together companies from stock markets in ten Asian countries plus Australia and New Zealand, slid 3.2 percent to 113.78 points. This is the strongest decrease in the stock measure within one day of 30 March so far. Financial companies in its composition have contributed most to the sharp drop in MSCI Asia Pacific. The good news that unemployment in Japan fell for the third consecutive month in October, while consumer spending increased household failed to stop reductions in the indexes. Thus MSCI Asia Pacific to cut their lead to five-year bottom of 9 March to 61 percent. For the past five trading sessions the index fell by 2,7 percent.
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Posted in Asian Finances