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Lowering loan interest rate good for real economy

China Daily | Updated: 2024-10-23 07:47

File photo shows an exterior view of the People's Bank of China in Beijing. [Photo/Xinhua]

The current loan prime rate (LPR) is 3.1 percent, while that for five years or more is 3.6 percent. This reduces the amount a borrower has to repay monthly toward mortgage loans. The move comes following a series of measures such as reserve requirement ratio cuts and interest rate reductions. This not only helps reduce loan costs for residents and enterprises but also effectively stimulates market vitality, promoting growth in consumption and investment.

On Oct 17, the People's Bank of China conducted a 200 billion yuan ($28.07 billion) medium-term lending facility operation and a 100 billion yuan seven-day reverse purchasing operation, which laid the foundation for further reductions in the LPR, helping to lower banks' financing costs, thereby encouraging banks to finance real economy at lower interest rates.

That once again proves the flexibility and precision of monetary policy in macroeconomic regulation.

Continuous RRR cuts and interest rate reductions have effectively enhanced the public's sense of gain. For individuals, a decrease in monthly repayment means an increase in disposable income, playing a significant role in improving the quality of life and meeting broader consumption needs. Especially for young families, this policy adjustment can alleviate their spending pressure.
This adjustment can also further enhance confidence in the real estate market, providing positive expectations for its recovery.

For small and micro businesses, a reduction in loan costs can provide more abundant cash flow, helping businesses expand production scale, increase R&D investment, and explore new business areas.
This also provides strong support for innovation and development across the entire industry. Moreover, cost reductions also help improve product competitiveness, promote export growth, and give a boost to the domestic economy.

The reduction in the LPR brings many benefits, and its sustained effects depend on the effective transmission by financial institutions. They should clear downstream bottlenecks to ensure the benefits reach those most in need.

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