1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910791002003321

Titolo

People’s Republic of China : : Staff Report for the 2014 Article IV Consultation

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Washington, D.C. : , : International Monetary Fund, , 2014

ISBN

1-4983-3578-0

1-4983-2070-8

1-4983-1196-2

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (116 p.)

Collana

IMF Staff Country Reports

Disciplina

330.951

Soggetti

International economic relations

Banks and Banking

Money and Monetary Policy

Public Finance

Statistics

Criminology

Data Collection and Data Estimation Methodology

Computer Programs: Other

Debt

Debt Management

Sovereign Debt

Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General

Illegal Behavior and the Enforcement of Law

Banks

Depository Institutions

Micro Finance Institutions

Mortgages

Public finance & taxation

Econometrics & economic statistics

Monetary economics

Corporate crime

white-collar crime

Banking

Public debt

Anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT)

Shadow banking

Credit



Financial statistics

Crime

Money

Financial services

Economic and financial statistics

Debts, Public

Money laundering

Finance

Nonbank financial institutions

Law and legislation

China Economic conditions

China Social conditions

China, People's Republic of

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Description based upon print version of record.

Nota di contenuto

""Cover""; ""CONTENTS""; ""SETTING""; ""A. Background""; ""B. Developments and Outlook""; ""RISKS AND BUFFERS""; ""A. Domestic Vulnerabilities""; ""B. Domestic Risk Assessment""; ""C. External Risks""; ""SUSTAINING GROWTH AND MANAGING RISKS""; ""A. Transition to a New Growth Model""; ""B. Addressing Vulnerabilities and Managing Demand""; ""SCENARIOS AND SPILLOVERS""; ""STAFF APPRAISAL""; ""A. Revised Estimate on Augmented Balance and Debt""; ""B. LGFVs: Government Units or Nonfinancial Public Corporations?""; ""C. Technical Details on Augmented Estimates:""; ""BOXES""

""1. Real Estate: Impact of a Market Correction""""2. Corporate Leverage in China""; ""3. Local Government Finances""; ""4. Rapid Growth in Shadow Banking and Internet Finance""; ""5. International Perspective on China's Credit Boom""; ""6. Fiscal Options: Reducing the Deficit and Promoting Inclusive Growth""; ""7. Fiscal Policy for Greener Growth""; ""8. RMB Internationalization""; ""9. External Assessment""; ""10. Potential Growth and Output Gap""; ""11. Giving Credit for China's Slowdown�The Third-Plenum Reform Blueprint""; ""FIGURES""; ""1. Growth and Inflation""

""2. Financial Sector Development""""3. Rebalancing""; ""4. Balance of Payments""; ""5. Banking Sector""; ""TABLES""; ""1. Selected Economic Indicators""; ""2. Balance of Payments""; ""3. Indicators of External Vulnerability""; ""4. Monetary Developments""; ""5. General Government Fiscal Data""; ""6. Illustrative Medium-Term Scenario""; ""APPENDICES""; ""I. Summary of Staff Recommendations and Announced Reform Initiatives Following the Third Plenum""; ""II. Progress on Key Recommendations of the FSAP, 2013�2014""; ""III. Augmented Fiscal Data""; ""IV. Risk Assessment Matrix""

""V. Debt Sustainability Analysis""""CONTENTS""; ""FUND RELATIONS""; ""WORLD BANK-IMF COLLABORATION""; ""RELATIONS WITH THE ASIAN DEVELOPMENT BANK""; ""STATISTICAL ISSUES""; ""TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE""

Sommario/riassunto

KEY ISSUES Context. After three decades of remarkable growth, the economy has been slowing. Much of the slowdown has been structural,



reflecting the natural convergence process and waning dividends from  past reforms; weak global growth has also contributed. Moreover, since the global financial crisis,  growth has relied too much on investment and credit, which is not sustainable and has created  rising vulnerabilities. Growth was 7.7 percent in 2013, and is expected to slow to around 7½  percent this year and decline further over the medium term. Focus. The pattern of growth since the global financial crisis is not sustainable and has resulted  in rising vulnerabilities. The discussions focused on assessing the risks posed by the continued build-up of vulnerabilities; reforms to unleash new, sustainable engines of growth and reduce  vulnerabilities; and how to best manage aggregate demand in this context, as growth is slowing yet  risks are still rising. A key takeaway is that to secure a safer development path, accommodative  policies need to be carefully unwound, accompanied by decisive implementation of the announced  reform agenda to promote rebalancing. The result will be somewhat slower but safer growth in the  near term, with the significant long-run benefit of securing more inclusive, environment-friendly,  and sustainable growth. Risks. Credit and ‘shadow banking,’ local government finances, and the corporate sector—  particularly real estate—are the key, and interlinked, areas of rising vulnerability. In the near  term, the risk of a hard landing is still considered low as the government has the capacity to  combat potential shocks. However, without a change in the pattern of growth, the hard-landing risk  continues to rise and is assessed to be medium-likely over the medium term.  Reform agenda. The authorities have announced a comprehensive and ambitious blueprint of reforms.  Successful implementation should achieve the desired transformation of the economy, but will also  be challenging.  Demand management. Reining in credit growth, local government borrowing, and investment will  address the risks, but also slow growth. Macro support should be calibrated to allow needed  adjustments to take place, while preventing growth from slowing too much. Scenarios and spillovers. With faster adjustment and reform implementation, growth will be somewhat  lower in the near term, with moderate spillovers for trading partners. However, in the medium term,  income and consumption will both be higher—a result that is good for China and good for the global  economy.