Sunday, November 9, 2008

China:"A stimulus package estimated at 4 trillion yuan (about 570 billion U.S. dollars) will be spent over the next two years"

China goes stimulus, via Alphaville:

"China said on Sunday it will loosen credit conditions, cut taxes and embark on a massive infrastructure spending program in a wide-ranging effort to offset adverse global economic conditions by boosting domestic demand."

Stimulus plan is to increase domestic demand. It's going to:

1) Ease credit
2) Cut taxes
3) Spend on infrastructure

"A stimulus package estimated at 4 trillion yuan (about 570 billion U.S. dollars) will be spent over the next two years to finance programs in 10 major areas, such as low-income housing, rural infrastructure, water, electricity, transportation, the environment, technological innovation and rebuilding from several disasters, most notably the May 12 earthquake.

The policies include a comprehensive reform in value-added taxes, which would cut industry costs by 120 billion yuan.

Commercial banks' credit ceilings will be abolished to channel more lending to priority projects, rural areas, smaller enterprises, technical innovation and industrial rationalization through mergers and acquisitions."

$570 billion of two years. Wow

3) Spend on infrastructure:

A. Low-income housing

B. Rural infrastructure

C. Water

D. Electricity

E. Transportation

F. Environmental projects

G. Technology

H. Enhanced disaster relief

For 2) Cut taxes

A. Cut VAT

For 1) Ease credit

A. Lower capital requirements

And 4) Encourage mergers and acquisitions

"The meeting decided that credit expansion must be "rational" and "target spheres that would promote and consolidate the expansion of consumer credit."

"The most recent modification was in December, when the government resorted to a combination of "tight" monetary policy and "prudent" fiscal policy to fight inflation."

"in September -- the focal task of macro-economic control has shifted from beating inflation to sustaining economic growth."

So, moving from fighting inflation to encouraging growth.

"The past three months have seen a series of stimulus policies: interest rate cuts, lower bank reserve requirement ratios, tax changes, higher credit quotas and the injection of central government funds to infrastructure construction.

The meeting decided that higher investment must be able to facilitate economic restructuring, promote growth potential by channeling investment to where it's most needed and spur private consumption."

They tend to repeat things a lot in these press releases.

Here's Brad Setser earlier on the Chinese stimulus plan
.

Try here as well.

From the WSJ, some analysis of the plan.

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