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China Should Watch for Asset Bubbles: Central Bank Official

Reuters
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China needs to be alert to the danger of asset bubbles, but headline inflation is unlikely to be a risk for some time, Fan Gang, a member of the People's Bank of China's monetary policy committee, said.

Speaking at a forum in Hong Kong on Wednesday, Fan said Chinese gross domestic product could expand between 8 and 9 percent in 2010. Growth this year would be above the government's target of 8 percent, he added.

Whereas China ran no risk of a double dip following its recovery from the economic downturn, there was such a threat for the United States, Fan said.

Once the stimulus injected into the U.S. economy faded in the second half of 2010, it was not obvious what would sustain the momentum of the present rebound, said Fan, who holds the seat on the advisory body reserved for an academic.

His warning of potential asset bubbles builds on stinging criticism of ultra-loose U.S. monetary policy by Chinese banking regulator Liu Mingkang.

"It is boosting speculative investment in stock and property markets and will pose new, insurmountable risks to the global recovery and, particularly, to the recovery in emerging markets," Liu, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, said on Sunday.

Economists say the risk of asset price bubbles is especially acute in economies such as Hong Kong and China, which effectively import U.S. monetary policy because they peg their currencies to the dollar.

Although he flagged the risk of bubbles and said real estate in cities such as Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen was expensive, Fan said nationwide property prices in China were not "crazy".

"If that can be contained to a few places, it will not cause a crisis like the one that happened in the U.S.," Fan said.