PBOC’s Hu says falling inflation biggest risk to China’s economy
Senior central bank official says fear of falling prices behind the recent cut in interest rates, playing down concerns about slowing growth

The People's Bank of China sees falling prices as the biggest risk to the economy and also the primary reason behind its first interest rate cut in two years, deputy governor Hu Xiaolian said.
Indicating more steps might be taken, Hu yesterday told a financial forum: "The emphasis that the prudent monetary stance will stay intact doesn't mean we wouldn't adopt various monetary tools."
The comments were the first from a senior PBOC official on the central bank's policy thinking after the one-year lending benchmark rate was unexpectedly lowered by 40 basis points last Friday, while deposit rates were cut by 25 basis points, along with a lift in its upper float limit.
Calling the falling inflation the "most prominent problem", Hu said: "Cutting benchmark rates was aimed at making the actual interest rates more reasonable, in a bid to help ease the financing burden facing companies."
She played down concerns about slowing growth, although many analysts believe the rate cut was also prompted by worries over economic prospects. The job market was generally sound, Hu added.
China's inflation rate eased to a near-five-year low of 1.6 per cent in the past two months, far below the official goal of about 3.5 per cent for this year. The producer price index has stayed negative for two years amid sluggish industrial demand.