Finance & economics | No rush

China’s central bank tries to save the economy—and the stockmarket

But it will need more help from the government

Hoardings surround the People's Bank of China building in Beijing, China, on May 29th 2024
The start of a new cycle?Photograph: Getty Images
|Hong Kong

As China’s economy has descended into deflation, the central bank’s lack of urgency has been a source of frustration for many economists. Policymakers at the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) initially expressed confidence that deflation was, so to speak, transitory. When it then persisted, they worried less about falling prices than about the side-effects of fighting them. They were reluctant to ease monetary policy decisively as China’s currency was too weak, banks’ profit margins too slim and bond yields too low.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “No rush”

From the September 28th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Dark rain clouds move over the port of Hamburg, Germany

Germany’s economy goes from bad to worse

Things may look brighter next year, but the relief will be short-lived

An economics Nobel for work on why nations succeed and fail

Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James Robinson tackled the most important question of all


Why investors should still avoid Chinese stocks

The debate about “uninvestibility” obscures something important


China’s property crisis claims more victims: companies

Unsold homes are contributing to a balance-sheet recession

Europe’s green trade restrictions are infuriating poor countries

Only the poorest can expect help to cushion the blow

How America learned to love tariffs

Protectionism hasn’t been this respectable for decades



Discover more

An economics Nobel for work on why nations succeed and fail

Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson and James Robinson tackled the most important question of all

Why investors should still avoid Chinese stocks

The debate about “uninvestibility” obscures something important


A man looks at foreign currency exchange rates in Istanbul

Turkey’s long hard struggle with inflation

High interest rates are starting to do the trick


Europe’s green trade restrictions are infuriating poor countries

Only the poorest can expect help to cushion the blow

Why have markets grown more captivated by data releases?

Especially when the quality of statistics is deteriorating

Can the world’s most influential business index be fixed?

Two cheers for the World Bank’s new global business survey