Going against the tide: China’s monetary stimulus efforts run contrary to those of other major central banks

 

The divergence in policy decision-making between China and the West stands in sharp contrast to the coordinated efforts made at the start of the pandemic and raises concerns for global economic prospects in 2022. Indeed, last week, President Xi Jinping warned major central banks that siphoning monetary stimulus too early would have serious economic consequences across developing markets. That being said, it should be viable for China’s monetary authorities to go against the grain, as domestic consumer inflation is relatively in check, capital inflows remain healthy and growth prospects will be supported by ongoing stimulus efforts.  

Our latest FocusEconomics Consensus Forecast sees GDP-weighted average policy rates in major economies rising from 0.14% at the end of 2021 to 0.48% by the end of this year. Our panel also estimates GDP-weighted policy rates in Asia (excluding Japan) to reach 2.09% by the end of 2022, which is higher than the 1.90% logged at the end of last year. In contrast, China’s interest rates are seen dropping further as the Central Bank continues to prop up the economy.

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Insights from Our Analyst Network

Commenting on the monetary policy outlook for China, analysts at ING noted: 

“The impact of the zero-Covid policy and regulatory blast that has hit sectors from energy to education, and most notably property development in recent months, is weighing on growth to the extent that the People’s Bank of China has been cutting rates since mid-December, and cut again in January. We anticipate more rate cuts over the coming weeks and possible months as well as additional reductions of the Reserve Rate Requirement.” 

Furthermore, commenting on the monetary policy outlook for the U.S., James Orlando, a senior economist at TD Economics, noted:  

 “The Fed is all but guaranteed to hike its policy rate in March. From there we have the Fed hiking every three months until the policy rate gets to 2%. Clear communication to this end will help lift bond yields and slow demand, easing some of the supply/demand imbalances that are responsible for the high inflation environment that we have now.”  

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