BEIJING - China is seeking more channels to use its massive foreign exchange
reserves, which are expected to continue growing after it quintupled in the past
five years, said some financial experts before the annual session of the
country's top political advisory body that opens Saturday afternoon.
Contrary to its past policies, the country is implementing stricter
regulation on incoming foreign exchanges and loosening rigid controls on
outgoing reserves, said Huang Zemin, a member of the National Committee of the
Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) and head of the
International Finance Institute of East China Normal University.
The foreign exchange reserves reached 1.066 trillion US dollars at the end of
2006, up from 212.2 billion dollars at the end of 2001, according to the
People's Bank of China.
The advisor said the country is seeking more channels to ease the pressure
generated by rising foreign reserves, allowing businesses to keep a larger share
of their foreign income and encouraging overseas financial investment in the
form of qualified domestic institutional investors (QDII).
The State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) granted 15 banks overseas
investment quotas totaling 13.4 billion US dollars in 2006. Meanwhile, 15
insurance companies were granted overseas investment quotas of 5.17 billion US
dollars and one fund management company was given a quota of 500 million US
dollars.
The Chinese government should make use of its foreign reserves and play a
more active role in world economy, said CPPCC National Committee member Guo
Guoqing, a professor with the Renmin University of China based in Beijing.
Guo suggested China use part of its trade surplus to import technologies and
resources.
More than 2,200 CPPCC National Committee members are
expected to gather for the Fifth Session of the 10th CPPCC National Committee
that will last 12 days.