By Joe Cash
BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s top financial watchdogs vowed to keep up a campaign to ensure that the sector adheres to Communist Party values and serves the economy while avoiding “excessive” and “reckless” risks, the party’s official newspaper said on Tuesday.
President Xi Jinping has shown dissatisfaction with the $63- trillion financial sector, taking steps in his third term to boost the party’s ability to set its direction by creating party entities such as the Central Financial Commission.
“The financial powerhouse we want to build is a socialist financial powerhouse under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party,” the party’s top financial policy body and ideology taskforce said in an article in the People’s Daily.
“Stable financial development is guaranteed by strict and tough supervision,” added the article, jointly attributed to the office of the Central Financial Commission and the Central Financial Work Committee.
It also exhorted market players “to not act recklessly” and “establish a correct outlook on business, performance and risk, to avoid excessive risks beyond their ability to bear.”
The remarks came as top party officials have yet to concede to an all-out rescue plan in the face of a stock market sell-off, excessively leveraged developers and highly indebted local governments.
Instead, they maintain that a socialist economy can work as long as market players do not step out of line.
Although the world’s second-largest economy hit its target for growth of about 5% last year, analysts say officials will need to revive market-oriented reforms to stop it from slowing to about 3% a year, which would feel like an economic recession.
In 2022, Xi laid out a long-term vision of “Chinese-style modernisation”, with a goal of doubling the economy by 2035 that government economists say calls for average annual growth of 4.7%.
Recent months have seen some former senior finance officials expelled from the party or charged with bribery, as Xi’s anti-graft drive works its way through the sector.
“We are determined to win the battle against corruption in the financial sector,” the watchdogs added, while telling financiers to “abide by market rules and professional ethics.”
They warned financiers to “focus their innovations on service to the real economy and not engage in self-inflated pseudo-innovation”.
(Reporting by Joe Cash; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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