Title: Peoples Bank of China: Monetary Policy Practice
1Peoples Bank of ChinaMonetary Policy Practice
- for the Chinese Economy (ECON6031)
- by Nipa Piboontanasawat (2008966781 )
- on April 1, 2009
2Background
- On 12/1/1948, the ruling Communist party
consolidated the former Huabei Bank, Beihai Bank
and Xibei Farmer Bank and established the PBoC
and put it under the Ministry of Finance. - Between 1950 and 1978, the PBoC serves the entire
Chinese financial system as a central bank as
well as a commercial bank.
3Background (Continued)
- After economic reform took place in 1978, the
PBoC departed the Ministry of Finance and its
duties as a commercial bank were divided among 4
state-owned banks over the years the Bank of
China, the Peoples Construction Bank of China,
the Agricultural Bank of China and the Industrial
and Commercial Bank of China.
4Background (Continued)
- In 1983, the State Council confirmed the status
of the PBoC as a central bank. - In 2003, the China Banking Regulatory Commission
was established to take over from the PBoC the
role of supervising the financial industry. - Since then, the main role of the PBoC is to
formulate and implement monetary policy.
5Management
- The PBoC has a monetary policy committee, which
consists of 13 members, including Governor Zhou
Xiaochuan. - The PBoC is under the leadership of the State
Council therefore, any decision involving
monetary policy has to be approved by the State
Council before being implemented.
6Monetary Policy Tools
- Interest Rates(Lending Rates, Deposit Rates,
Re-lending Rates and Rediscount Rate) - Reserve Requirement
- Open-market Operations
- Exchange Rate
- Administrative Monetary Policy
7Interest Rates
- Lending rates -- The rates at which commercial
banks charge the public when lending. - Deposit rates -- The rates at which commercial
banks pay the public in return for deposits. - Re-lending rates -- The rates at which the PBoC
charges commercial banks when lending. - Rediscount rate -- The rate at which the PBoC
charges commercial banks with discount notes.
81-Year Lending Rate
91-Year Deposit Rate
10Divisible by 9 Rule
- On 12/23/2008, the PBoC cut the 1-year lending
and deposit rates by 27 basis points. - On 11/27/2008, it cut the same rates by 108
basis points. - Interest rates and their changes are divisible by
9, instead of the increments of 25 used by most
other central banks. Why?
11Divisible by 9 Rule (Continued)
- Reasons
- 1. Chinese financial calendar has 360 days,
instead of 365 or 366 days. - 2. Abacus.
- 3. Superstitions -- the number 9 in Chinese
language shares a pronunciation with the word
longevity'' and monetary policy has to be
sustainable.
12Reserve Requirement
- The proportion of deposits commercial banks put
aside as reserves. - Besides the level of reserve requirements, the
PBoC sets the interest rates at which it pays
commercial banks for the required reserves and
the voluntary ones.
13Reserve Requirement
14Open-market Operations
- The PBoC conducts open-market operations
regularly to directly control the money supply. - It does so by issuing the central-bank bonds --
selling them when it wants to reduce money supply
and buying them back when it wants to increase
money supply.
15Exchange Rate
- On 7/21/2005, the PBoC adopted a managed,
floating foreign-exchange system. - It began allowing the yuan to trade against a
basket of currencies, with a so-called reference
exchange rate set daily. - It also specified the daily fluctuation limit of
the yuan against the U.S. dollar to be 0.3
percent. Then, on 5/21/2007, it widened the band
to 0.5 percent.
16U.S. Dollar/Yuan Exchange Rate
17(No Transcript)
18Euro/Yuan Exchange Rate
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20Administrative Monetary Policy
- Because most of the commercials banks in China
are state-owned, the PBoC is able to conduct a
so-called administrative monetary policy. - For example, it will meet with the state-owned
banks and tell them to reduce loans when it wants
to tighten monetary policy. It will tell them to
increase loans when it wants to ease monetary
policy.
21Transmission Channels
- Bank and Inter-bank Interest Rates
- Inflation Expectations
- Consumption and Investment Behaviors
- Credit Supply
- Asset Prices
22Transmission Channels (Continued)
- When the PBoC changes lending and deposit rates,
it first directly affects bank interest rates
because it sets those interest rates, with a very
limited freedom of a floor for lending rates and
a ceiling for deposit rates. - It also indirectly affects inter-bank interest
rates when it changes the re-lending or
rediscount rates, or the reserve requirement for
commercial banks.
23Transmission Channels (Continued)
- The PBoC guides public expectations of future
inflation and as a result, affects price
developments. - The change in interest rates affects consumption
and investment behaviors by making it more
expensive or cheaper to fund consumption and
investment. - The change in reserve requirement also affects
the amount of money available for lending to
households and companies.
24Transmission Channels (Continued)
- Although it is difficult to predict, the change
in interest rates and reserve requirement affect
asset prices because of its impact on funding
conditions and public expectations. The wealth
effect from higher or lower asset prices then
affect consumption and investment behaviors. - Lastly, changes in consumption and investment
behaviors affect the level of domestic demand for
goods and services relative to domestic supply
and as a result, influence price developments.
25How Effective Is It?
26Recommendations
- Liberalize Interest Rates
- Liberalize Exchange Rate
- Increase PBoC Independence
- Increase Monetary Policy Transparency
- Increase PBoC Creditablity
27The End