Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, facing calls to widen support for indebted European countries, signalled that developed nations should cut deficits and open markets rather than rely on China to bail out the world economy.
“Countries must first put their own houses in order,” Wen said on Wednesday at the World Economic Forum in the Chinese city of Dalian. “Developed countries must take responsible fiscal and monetary policies. What is most important now is to prevent the further spread of the sovereign debt crisis in Europe.”
China can best contribute to the global economic recovery by ensuring steady growth at home, Wen said, calling on the European Union (EU) and US to allow more Chinese investment in return. Stocks dropped in Asia as the comments damped optimism that China would help stabilise the euro region, after Italy this month followed Spain, Portugal and Greece in seeking investment from the world’s fastest-growing major economy.
“What he is basically saying is China wants to help, they want to invest, but we can’t help you take the proper measures to control the debt crisis, you’ve got to do that on your own,” said William Rhodes, a senior adviser to Citigroup Inc who was at Wen’s speech. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gave up its early gain of as much as 0.3 per cent to trade 1.8 per cent lower at 5.19 pm in Hong Kong. Crude oil in New York was 1.2 per cent down at $89.17 a barrel. Losses were capped after Chinese business magazine Caijing reported that China is still willing to buy bonds of crisis-hit nations, citing Zhang Xiaoqiang, a vice chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission.
Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou will hold a conference call with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Wednesday amid increasing speculation that Greece will default. Spain is scheduled to sell debt tomorrow, after demand fell at an auction by Italy yesterday.
A default by Greece would be a “doomsday” scenario, Rhee Chang Yong, chief economist of the Asian Development Bank, said in Hong Kong on Wednesday. “That’s the responsibility of the European and advanced economies’ policymakers not to let this happen, because if this happens, there would be huge turmoil in the global financial market.”
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US Treasury Secretary Timothy F Geithner will press EU finance ministers to do more to combat the crisis when he meets with them this week, a euro area official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because preparations for the meeting in Wroclaw, Poland, on September 16 and 17 are confidential. It will be the first time Geithner has attended a session of Europe’s Economic and Financial Affairs Council, or Ecofin.
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
The European crisis was “very, very damaging in the American economy last summer,” Geithner told Bloomberg Television on September 9. “It’s very important to the world that Europeans do what they need to do so that the problems they’re facing don’t spread.”
Wen said he was confident that China would achieve “longer term, better quality” economic expansion, and that this would be the country’s contribution to sustainable global growth. The Chinese government would adopt policies to avoid volatility in its economy, he said.
In return, Wen called on the US to maintain fiscal and financial stability and “ensure the interests of global investors.” China’s $3.2 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves make it the biggest holder of US Treasuries.
The US needs to lift export restrictions and, together with the EU, open markets to investment by Chinese companies, Wen said.
QUID PRO QUO
“We have on many occasions expressed our readiness to extend a helping hand, and our readiness to increase our investment in Europe,” Wen said. At the same time, “they should recognise China’s full market economy status” before the 2016 deadline set by the World Trade Organization (WTO). “To show one’s sincerity on this issue a few years ahead of that time is the way a friend treats another friend,” he said.
Market economy status would help Chinese exporters defend themselves in investigations that they are selling goods at below cost in the EU. As part of its accession agreement to join the WTO in December 2001, China agreed to be recognised as a non-market economy for 15 years in anti-dumping probes.
“China knows ‘we’re in this together,’ and it will benefit by helping its two biggest export markets,” said Shen Jianguang, a Hong Kong-based economist at Mizuho Securities Asia Ltd who has worked for the International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank. China’s leaders are taking “into account the nation’s own development strategy, such as recognition of market status, which is very important for Chinese business.”
‘LAST RESORT’
The Chinese government shouldn’t buy bonds issued by individual euro-area countries because their leaders and the European Central Bank are in disarray, Yu Yongding, a former adviser to China’s central bank, said in emailed comments on Wednesday.
The nation is not a lender of last resort for “troubled countries,” said Yu. “China has to wait until it can see a clearer road map by euro countries for solving sovereign-debt problems,” he said on Wednesday.
Finance ministers from Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will meet on September 22 to discuss the European debt crisis and make a decision on whether they will help, R Gopalan, secretary in the Department of Economic Affairs in India’s finance ministry, said in New Delhi on Wednesday.
‘NOT POOR’
The European “countries are not poor,” said Rhodes, author of “Banker to the World: Leadership Lessons from the Front Lines of Global Finance.” “They have got to get their act together, just like we have to in the United States.”
Italian officials held talks in the past few weeks with Chinese counterparts about potential investments in the country, an Italian government official said September 12, adding that bonds weren’t the focus.
“A few months ago, China said it would buy euro zone debt but then they bought really little of it at auctions,” said Jan Lambregts, global head of financial market research at Rabobank International in London. “They haven’t really been putting their money where their mouth is.”