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BEIJING, May 16 (Xinhuanet) -- China reaffirmed on
Saturday its commitment to maintaining its exchange rate, saying the current
level was vital for economic growth for itself and the rest of Asia.
Finance Minister Jin Renqing said he was confident China's economy would achieve a soft landing,
slowing to a sustainable pace without falling into the serious downturn that
investors globally are worried about.

Chinese Finance Jin
Renqing, left, hands in hand with Japanese Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki to
take a picture during the Press Conference of ASEAN plus 3 Finance Ministers
Meeting and Launch of Asian Bonds Online at a hotel in the resort island of
Jeju, South Korea May 15, 2004. They are attending the 37th Asian Development
Bank annual meeting for three days.(China Daily/AP)
"We are confident
that we have the ability to achieve a soft landing for our economy and to
sustain a smooth and rapid pace of growth," the minister told reporters at a
meeting of the Asian Development Bank on the South Korean resort island of
Cheju.
"As such, preserving the basic stability of the
yuan's exchange rate is vital for the future stable growth of China and also for
Asia's economy as a whole."
China keeps its currency, the yuan, in a tiny band
around 8.28 per dollar, a level that has attracted criticism from the United
States and other countries as too low and giving Chinese exporters an unfair
advantage.
Investors have speculated that the authorities will
lift the value of the yuan, partly because doing so would help the country with
its big economic problem -- a powerful boom that threatens to turn to a bust.
It has implemented an array of measures to restrain
sectors of the economy that are most experiencing over-investment, such as steel
and automobiles, but has resisted raising the exchange rate or interest rates.
Asked if China was considering raising interest
rates, Jin said: "Inflation is still under control. The 2.8 percent rise in the
CPI that we saw in the first quarter was mainly due to expensive raw materials
but the prices of most consumer goods did not rise.
"Of course, the measures that we have undertaken will
take time to produce results. But we are starting to see some results. Exports
and fixed-asset investment are starting to slow."
Jin cited a drop in steel prices as further evidence
that cooling measures were taking effect.
Consumer prices were 2.8 percent higher in the first
quarter than a year earlier.
Most countries use interest rates to control demand
within their economies, but China has left its official one-year lending rate at
5.31 percent because, analysts say, anything more could kill struggling state
firms and also attract more foreign money into the economy, propelling it
faster.
(China Daily/Agencies) |