CHINA / National |
Paulson: Open financial markets widerBy Zhang Nan (chinadaily.com.cn)Updated: 2007-03-08 14:28
SHANGHAI - US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson Thursday urged China to speed up opening its financial markets to promote economic growth and stability. "Because of its size and its role in world markets, China is already a global economic leader and deserves to be recognized as a leader. And with leadership comes responsibility." Mr Paulson said in a speech to business leaders at the Shanghai Futures Exchange [transcript of Paulson speech]. The responsibility includes pace and shape of China's economic reforms, which mean forming quickly toward transparent, liquid, stable capital market. "The risks for China are greater in moving too slowly than in moving too
quickly toward transparent, liquid, stable capital markets," said Paulson,
a former head of investment powerhouse Goldman Sachs. A freer and more developed financial system would help allocating capital, the secretary said. "Financial sector development is the key to China's transition into an economy that is less reliant on industrial activity, produces more high value-added products, and reduces the intensity of natural resources consumption," he said. His policy prescriptions for China included strong property rights, robust
supervision by regulators, sound accounting and governance standards, stronger
financial institutions and independent credit rating agencies. With its economy growing at a rate of about 10 percent annually, China should
act fast, he said. "Paulson's remarks recognized China's economic position," Huang Renwei, vice president of Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences told China Daily Website, "but as to financial markets opening, it can't be done soon, it needs more time." Henry Paulson arrived in China on Wednesday on a two-day visit. Paulson met in Beijing with Chinese Vice Premier Wu Yi, a former trade minister, China's most powerful woman and a key point person for dealings with Washington. Those talks were in preparation for the next round of talks called the China-US Strategic Economic Dialogue, meant at defusing tensions through collaboration on a wide range of issues. |
|