China seeks to cool overheated sectors   (AFP)  Updated: 2006-05-07 09:57  
Hyderabad, India -- China's central bank is seeking to 
cool down overheating economic sectors such as real estate as well as cut 
massive foreign exchange reserves, a top government official revealed.
  
 
 
 
   Chinese vice minister 
 of finance Li Yong (L), Japanese Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki (C) 
 and ADB President Haruhiko Kuroda (R) attend a seminar at the Asian 
 Development Bank (ADB) annual meeting in the southern Indian city of 
 Hyderabad May 4, 2006. Finance ministers from China, Japan and South Korea 
 called on Thursday for more financial cooperation among Asian countries 
 and said they would look further into the idea of regional currency units. 
 [Reuters] |    
 
 
The statement by Li Yong, Vice Minister of Finance, at 
the annual Asian Development Bank meeting in this southern Indian city came as 
he said economic growth in 2006 could hit 9.5 percent without new fiscal and 
monetary steps.  
 
 
The concern about overheating comes after the economy expanded by 
faster-than-expected 10.2 percent in the first quarter over the same period the 
previous year, after posting a rate of 9.9 percent for all of 2005. 
 "During the first quarter of 2006 we have tried to balance investments in 
certain sectors," the minister told delegates. 
 "These sectors such as real estate and steel became overheated in 2005. Our 
central bank is trying to cool down overinvestment in these sectors," he said. 
 Housing has become so expensive in China that seven out of 10 urban families 
cannot afford their own homes, the state-owned Xinhua news agency said. 
 In April the People's Bank of China boosted the one-year benchmark lending 
rate by 27 basis points to 5.85 percent to brake credit and control "excessively 
fast" release of bank loans. 
   
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