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POLITICAL ECONOMY
Goldman Sachs chief 'would not invest in China'
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 17, 2015


China needs to improve economic data quality: IMF
Washington (AFP) Sept 17, 2015 - The International Monetary Fund called Thursday for China to improve its economic data, especially on its growth rate, the subject of continued skepticism about its reliability.

The debate over the true strength of the Chinese economy has heated up in recent months on mounting signs of slowdown and heavy turmoil in the Chinese stock markets.

"It's important that China does continue to improve its data quality to reflect the fast-changing structure of its economy," said IMF spokesman Gerry Rice at a press briefing.

Rice welcomed China's "great progress" in modernizing its statistics on gross domestic product (GDP), the broad measure of the economy's activity, bringing the methodology "largely in line with international practice."

"Like many countries, however, there's room for improvement," he added.

The Chinese government regularly reports growth in the world's second-largest economy at 7.0 percent and above, a pace that some experts view as inflated.

All 188 member nations of the IMF are required to provide the Washington-based crisis lender with reliable economic data.

Argentina has been censured by the IMF since 2013 after the country failed to reform its long-distorted data on economic growth and consumer prices. The censure could result in the loss of its voting rights or membership at the institution.

The chairman of investment banking giant Goldman Sachs has slammed China's handling of its economy, adding he would not currently invest in the country, the Wall Street Journal reported Thursday.

Lloyd Blankfein told the paper that China's broad stock market intervention, including state-funded share buying, as it seeks to shore up slumping prices, was "ham-handed" and "sloppy".

"They don't have a lot of experience in this market stuff," Blankfein, who is also Goldman's chief executive, said of the ruling Communist authorities.

His comments come after Goldman this month said that it estimated China's economy was growing at around six percent a year, lower than the official figures of 7.0 percent for each of the first two quarters.

Some analysts fear that the world's second-largest economy could face a steep decline in expansion -- with ramifications for the rest of the world -- if it does not pull off difficult reforms to rebalance its model towards domestic consumption.

Blankfein said Chinese leaders "know what the problems are" but changes in policy would be "really hard".

He added that he "would not invest in China right now", the newspaper said.

Official figures show Chinese growth slowed in 2014 to its lowest rate for more than 25 years.

The OECD cut its world economic growth forecasts for 2015 and 2016 on Wednesday, warning of a global outlook clouded by uncertainty over China and a slowdown in Brazil.

"The Chinese authorities face the policy challenge to sustain growth while advancing structural change and managing risks," it said.

tjh/slb/psr

Goldman Sachs


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