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Zhou
Xiaochuan talks with IMF chief Christine Lagarde
(AFP/File, Jim Watson)
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BEIJING —
The head of China's central bank says the country will implement changes to its
financial system suggested by the International Monetary Fund "as
appropriate", the Washington-based lender said.
People's
Bank of China (PBOC) governor Zhou Xiaochuan told a joint PBOC-IMF symposium
held Friday and Saturday in Shanghai that international financial standards
were "critical" to reducing risk, the IMF said in a statement.
"Rigorous
implementation of international standards and codes is critical in reducing
financial risk," Zhou said in his keynote address to Asian central bankers
and regulators at the meeting.
Zhou was
responding to the IMF's first Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP) in
China, which last month called for sweeping reforms, blaming Beijing's
"heavy" involvement in banks and financial watchdogs for slack market
discipline and corporate governance.
In a list
of 29 key recommendations on how Beijing can improve its financial system, the
IMF urged policymakers to allow state-owned banks to make lending decisions
based on commercial risk rather than government policy.
Zhou stopped
short of saying the world's number two economy would adopt the IMF's
suggestions wholly, including those that Beijing relax control of the yuan
currency and allow the central bank more freedom in policy decisions.
"China
will further strengthen its financial stability, regulatory and supervisory
framework and promote financial reform and development by incorporating the
findings of the China FSAP as appropriate," Zhou said.
China is
one of 25 "systemically important countries" that has agreed to mandatory
IMF evaluations at least once every five years, though Beijing has no
obligation to implement the recommended reforms.
Rampant
lending since the 2008 financial crisis has left many companies and local
governments in China with huge debts, while a recent slowdown in economic
growth and falling property prices have fuelled fears of a rise in defaults.
Min Zhu,
the IMF's deputy managing director, said "the FSAP should continue to
evolve, in response to the needs of member countries, including those in this
region."

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