The People's Bank of China will keep the yuan basically stable
while forging ahead with reforms to help improve its currency
regime, it said in a statement summarizing the fourth-quarter
monetary policy committee meeting.
The PBOC said it would maintain a prudent monetary policy, keeping
its stance "neither too tight nor too loose". The prudent policy has
been in place since 2011.
"We will improve and optimize financing and credit structures,
increase the proportion of direct financing and reduce financing
costs," it said.
The central bank said it would closely watch changes in China's
economy and financial markets, as well as international capital
flows.
Top leaders at the annual Central Economic Work Conference pledged
to make China's monetary policy more flexible and expand its budget
deficit in 2016 to support a slowing economy as they seek to push
forward "supply-side reform".
The PBOC has cut interest rates six times since November 2014 and
lowered banks' reserve requirements, or the amount of cash that
banks must set aside as reserves.
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But such policy steps have yielded limited impact on the economy, as
the government has been struggling to reach its growth target of
about 7 percent this year.
President Xi Jinping has said China must keep annual average growth
of no less than 6.5 percent over the next five years to hit a goal
of doubling gross domestic product and per capita income by 2020
from 2010.
(Reporting by China Monitoring Desk and Kevin Yao; Editing by
Jacqueline Wong)
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