The People’s Bank of China may have two new officials leading the central bank following a reshuffle of government positions next month.
(Bloomberg) — The People’s Bank of China may have two new officials leading the central bank following a reshuffle of government positions next month.
Governor Yi Gang is widely expected to step down, potentially paving the way for veteran banker Zhu Hexin to take his place, according to a person familiar with the matter. The man likely to be China’s new vice premier in charge of economic policy, He Lifeng, is also being considered for the role of party secretary at the People’s Bank of China, the Wall Street Journal reported.
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The reported changes may not signal a major shift in monetary policy, economists and analysts say, instead affirming recent indications that the central bank will become a bit less hawkish in terms of cracking down on debt and financial risks and continue to pursue some reforms already signaled.
While the changes aren’t final yet, here’s a look at what analysts say may be some of the implications for the PBOC.
Fewer Hawks
Christopher Beddor, deputy China research director at Gavekal Dragonomics, said the next PBOC leadership would likely “nudge the central bank in a less hawkish direction.”
“It’s really hard to imagine just about any successor who would be as hawkish on monetary policy and banking regulation as Guo Shuqing,” Beddor said, referring to the PBOC party chief and banking regulator who went on a crusade to clean up the banking industry.
“He Lifeng is at core a local-government official who has spent most of his career trying to develop local economies, sometimes with substantial infrastructure-building,” Beddor added. “That’s perfectly understandable, but it also means he might not bring the same level of vigilance about the dangers of debt as Guo Shuqing or Liu He,” the outgoing vice premier.
More Reforms
Ding Shuang, chief economist for Greater China and North Asia at Standard Chartered Plc, doesn’t expect major changes in monetary policy.
“Monetary policy will likely continue in the reform direction that has already been set, and won’t be subject to a completely new thinking or any dramatic change,” he said. “The basic direction for the setting and implementation of monetary policy has already been confirmed.”
The PBOC is still in the process of reforming and liberalizing its interest rate and exchange rate systems, even after making some major progress over the past few years. The central bank has also been elevating the role of structural monetary policy tools, while strengthening a framework that tightened the screws on the lending behavior of banks, thus reining in risks.
“This is largely a status quo move,” said Trey McArver, co-founder of research firm Trivium China, of the possible He and Zhu appointments. McArver added that it was “hard to see” how the revived financial commission would be different from the already existing Financial Stability and Development Commission, which “has been very active in financial sector policy and regulation.”
More Pragmatism
The potential installation of senior political officials at the central bank has stirred speculation about what consolidated decision-making would mean. But the reported moves could actually usher in more pragmatic policy, according to Gabriel Wildau, a managing director at advisory firm Teneo Holdings LLC.
“China’s central bank has never been politically independent, not even a little, so these reported personnel appointments wouldn’t mark any change in that respect,” Wildau said. He added that the Politburo would “as always” need to approve major shifts in monetary policy.
Installing a Politburo member as PBOC party secretary “could even inject a greater degree of political pragmatism,” he added, given that Guo was never part of that the top decision-making body.
Foreign observers tend to view the dynamics around central bank policymaking in terms of “pro-reform” technocrats facing off against “compromised politicians,” Wildau said. But he argued that the recent housing market crackdown “seemed to be driven largely by relatively doctrinaire PBOC officials who had been warning for years about a bubble and finally saw their opportunity to deflate.”
“In retrospect, some pragmatic political intervention earlier on might have been better,” he said.
Shifting Priorities
The appointments of the new senior officials, if confirmed, might indicate a tweak to the priorities of top leadership, said Duncan Wrigley, chief China economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics Ltd.
“The guiding mantra would be, ‘The financial sector should serve the real economy,’ and not the other way around,” Wrigley said. Financial risk management had arguably been a leading concern in the decade before the coronavirus pandemic, he added.
Chinese President Xi Jinping wants to make sure that credit spurs growth, rather than leaking into the financial system, Wrigley said. He added that the Chinese leader would also want to ensure that funds are invested in research and development, along with technological innovation, without excess waste.
A possible financial regulatory overhaul “might indicate President’s Xi’s determination to drive through difficult financial sector reforms, as well coordinating policymaking via party mechanisms,” he said.
(Updates with more economist quotes.)
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