Minggu, 12 Maret 2023

Why China re-appointed US-educated 'sea turtle' Yi Gang as central bank chief - CNA

BEIJING: Yi Gang's surprise re-appointment as China's central bank governor on Sunday (Mar 12) means a pro-market mind of high international stature will continue to represent the world's second-largest economy on the global stage.

Yi, 65, was widely expected to retire as President Xi Jinping installs close allies in key roles in a sweeping government reshuffle at the start of his precedent-breaking third five-year term.

A new leadership team, formed mostly of homegrown talent loyal to Xi, raises concerns among the international business community amid rising tensions between China and the West over trade, technology, the war in Ukraine and other issues.

But Yi retaining his post as the governor of the People's Bank of China provides some relief as a familiar face, albeit at the helm of a diminished institution, focused mainly on monetary policy after the launch of a new financial watchdog.

The PBOC governor has high global exposure through institutions such as the Group of 20, the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and others.

"Yi's core competitiveness lies in his professional quality and international background," Xu Hongcai, deputy director of the economic policy commission at the state-backed China Association of Policy Science, told Reuters.

"The central bank governor is not a job that can be easily taken over by someone else. We need someone like Yi who can communicate on the international stage, such as G20," added Xu, who has previously worked at PBOC.

Yi reached retirement age and was expected to be replaced after he was dropped out of the Communist Party's Central Committee in October. Veteran Chinese banker Zhu Hexin, who heads the state-owned CITIC conglomerate, was seen as the leading candidate for the top PBOC post.

Unlike Zhu, who built his entire career in China, Yi spent more than a decade in the United States, completing his doctorate at the University of Illinois and teaching at Indiana University, making him one of China's highest-ranking "sea turtles", as overseas returnees are called.

Still, he comes from a humble background, enrolling at the elite Peking University after spending several years in the countryside during Mao Zedong's "Cultural Revolution".

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2023-03-12 08:12:00Z
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Sabtu, 11 Maret 2023

China's 'two sessions': Central bank and finance chiefs retain spots in cabinet shake-up - CNA

China’s legislature confirmed continued leading roles at the central bank and the finance ministry for Yi Gang and Liu Kun, as the country doubles down on tackling stubborn financial risks and technological bottlenecks in President Xi Jinping’s third five-year term.

The retention of the two senior officials, both past the retirement age and no longer members of the Communist Party’s elite Central Committee, also suggested a new political logic, with the decision-making power shifting to the party apparatus, analysts said.

The officials were nominated by Premier Li Qiang and confirmed by the National People’s Congress on Sunday (Mar 12).

Also confirmed as vice-premiers are Ding Xuexiang, He Lifeng, Zhang Guoqing, and Liu Guozhong. Zheng Shanjie was nominated to replace He as chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, the top economic planner.

The ministers for commerce, agriculture and technology will also stay in the next cabinet.

Analysts said the new financial line-up would have to continue the heavy task of defusing deep-seated problems in the world’s second-largest economy, managing fallout from overseas policy and funding the country’s technological ambitions.

The team could also usher in advances in overseas use of the yuan, digital currencies and international payment systems under the umbrella of “development security”.

Wang Jun, chief economist at Huatai Asset Management, said cabinet officials were increasingly seen as implementers, with their age and political status less of a consideration.

“The [nominees] are capable technocrats. This also reflects the intention of top leaders to maintain policy continuity and stability,” he said.

Yi, 65, a former associate professor at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and professor at Peking University, refrained from big stimulus and held consumer inflation at only 2 per cent last year, a sharp contrast to the 40-year high inflation in most Western countries.

“Senior positions like central bank governor should have solid macroeconomic training and deep understanding of modern monetary policies. Otherwise they are prone to making mistakes,” said Chen Zhiwu, a finance professor at the University of Hong Kong.

Chen said better controls might make the regulatory regime more efficient, but it would also reduce the room for financial reform and innovation, and might bring new risks over the next five years.

“Financial practices may turn highly homogeneous at the national level and across the country,” he said.

“The financial resonance of various regions, if economic problems occur, would make macroeconomic and financial risks even greater.”

Beijing has made the prevention of systemic financial risks a top priority since 2018.

To that end, regulators coordinated by the Financial Stability and Development Commission dismantled the financial empire of tycoon Xiao Jianhua, restructured national joint-stock bank Hengfeng and financially troubled small banks, and shut down thousands of peer-to-peer lending platforms.

But Xi has continued to express great concerns about financial risks.

At the closed-door central economic work conference in December, he specifically mentioned financial risks associated with the property market crisis and government debt.

He also raised the alarm about financial risks in a meeting with political advisers attending the “two sessions” last week, highlighting the threat of “detonation” from corruption and inadequate supervision.

In its annual macroeconomic policy assessment report, released online on Thursday, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Institute of Economics warned that systemic financial risks and instability were rising, while some small- and medium-sized financial institutions faced threats to their liquidity.

“As for now and the foreseeable future, it is necessary not only to prevent the risk of excessively rising macro leverage ratios, but also to guard against the risk of deleveraging caused by large fluctuations in housing prices,” it said.

As part of efforts to contain that risk, the authorities have announced plans to restructure the regulatory regime, including the creation of a national financial regulatory administration.

Raymond Yeung, chief Greater China economist at ANZ Bank, said: “The institutional reshuffle has strengthened Beijing’s direct control of the whole financial system.

“It is also a sign that de-risking will enjoy a high priority over the coming years.”

At the same time, Chinese authorities have tried to retain foreign investment amid efforts by the United States to step up technological containment and economic decoupling.

Overseas investors owned about 3.2 trillion yuan (US$461 billion) of the A-share market by the end of last year, or about 4 per cent of the total, while they also owned 3.39 trillion yuan of Chinese bonds – or 2.7 per cent of the total.

But the Chinese authorities have also stepped up criticism of US dollar “hegemony” and are developing a yuan-denominated payment system and a central bank digital currency and promoting greater use of the Chinese currency among countries involved in its Belt and Road Initiative.

Regulators are expected to continue de-risking in key institutions this year as bad assets have accumulated, take concerted regulatory action with the enactment of a financial stability law this year, and monitor potential negative spillover effects from international markets closely, according to a report released by Bank of China on Thursday.

Externally, “China should speed up the establishment of dynamic response plans and continue to improve the risk monitoring and early warning system”, it said.

This article was first published on SCMP.

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2023-03-12 03:02:26Z
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'ACS boys feel like they own the school', a principal once told Richard Seow. His reply: That's a good thing - The Straits Times

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'ACS boys feel like they own the school', a principal once told Richard Seow. His reply: That's a good thing  The Straits Times
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2023-03-11 22:00:00Z
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BBC sport output in chaos as Lineker taken off air in asylum row - CNA

LONDON: The BBC's sport service was in meltdown on Saturday (Mar 11) after pundits and commentators refused to work in support of presenter Gary Lineker, who was forced to "step back" after accusing the government of using Nazi-era rhetoric.

Match of the Day presenter Lineker, England's fourth most prolific goalscorer, sparked an impartiality row by criticising the British government's new policy on tackling illegal immigration.

The 62-year-old compared the language used to launch the new policy to that of Nazi-era Germany on Twitter, which the BBC said on Friday was a "breach of our guidelines".

"The BBC has decided that he will step back from presenting Match of the Day until we've got an agreed and clear position on his use of social media," the broadcaster said in a statement.

Lineker is a freelance broadcaster for the BBC, not a permanent member of staff, and is not responsible for news or political content so he does not need to adhere to the same strict rules on impartiality.

Pundits and former England strikers Ian Wright and Alan Shearer immediately tweeted that they would not take part either, followed by the programme's commentators.

Wright then said on his podcast on Saturday that he would quit the BBC if Lineker was sacked for good.

The BBC announced that the highlights show, a Saturday night fixture since 1964 and the longest-running football television programme in the world, would air without pundits or a presenter for the first time.

It also said players would not be asked for interviews after some indicated they would not be available in support of Lineker.

Adding to the chaos, sports presenters and pundits then pulled out of a slew of BBC radio and television shows on Saturday, forcing their cancellation and the airing of repeats and podcasts instead of live coverage.

"IMMEASURABLY CRUEL"

The row was sparked by Lineker's response to a video in which Home Secretary Suella Braverman unveiled plans to stop migrants crossing the Channel on small boats.

Lineker, the BBC's highest-paid star, wrote on Twitter: "This is just an immeasurably cruel policy directed at the most vulnerable people in language that is not dissimilar to that used by Germany in the '30s."

The Conservative government intends to outlaw asylum claims by all illegal arrivals and transfer them elsewhere, such as Rwanda, in a bid to stop the crossings, which totalled more than 45,000 last year.

A YouGov poll published on Monday showed 50 percent backing the measures, with 36 percent opposed.

But rights groups and the United Nations said the legislation would make Britain an international outlaw under European and UN conventions on asylum.

Some 36 Tory lawmakers have sent a letter to the BBC warning the affair will "no doubt shake many people's already fragile confidence" in the BBC's impartiality.

They are asking the BBC, which collects a licence fee from households with a television, for a full apology from Lineker.

The BBC's move sparked a wave of criticism from politicians and public figures, many of whom accused it of buckling to demands from Conservative politicians.

Sports correspondent Natalie Pirks posted a picture of a George Orwell statue outside the BBC building in a free-speech reference, while a petition calling for Lineker to be reinstated has attracted almost 160,000 signatures.

Former BBC director general Greg Dyke said the broadcaster had made a mistake.

"The real problem today is that the BBC has undermined its own credibility by doing this," he told the broadcaster, adding it could create the impression that the "BBC has bowed to government pressure".

SOCIAL MEDIA WARNING

The issue has brought to a head years of debate over BBC's impartiality, which intensified after Britain voted to leave the European Union in 2016.

Brexit supporters claimed that the corporation coverage was biased against them, while the left claimed that it allowed presenters to make disparaging remarks against former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn without punishment.

The Lineker row comes at a particularly heated period after it emerged that BBC chairman Richard Sharp allegedly facilitated a loan guarantee for former Prime Minister Boris Johnson while in the process of applying for the job.

BBC director-general Tim Davie warned staff about their use of social media when he took on the role at the end of 2020.

Lineker, a former Barcelona, Tottenham and Everton player, has hosted refugees at his home and has previously been vocal in his criticism of the government's handling of migrant crossings.

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2023-03-11 13:50:29Z
1828765535

BBC football show in chaos as Lineker taken off air in asylum row - CNA

LONDON: The BBC's sport service was in meltdown on Saturday (Mar 11) after pundits and commentators refused to work in support of presenter Gary Lineker, who was forced to "step back" after accusing the government of using Nazi-era rhetoric.

Match of the Day presenter Lineker, England's fourth most prolific goalscorer, sparked an impartiality row by criticising the British government's new policy on tackling illegal immigration.

The 62-year-old compared the language used to launch the new policy to that of Nazi-era Germany on Twitter, which the BBC said on Friday was a "breach of our guidelines".

"The BBC has decided that he will step back from presenting Match of the Day until we've got an agreed and clear position on his use of social media," the broadcaster said in a statement.

Lineker is a freelance broadcaster for the BBC, not a permanent member of staff, and is not responsible for news or political content so he does not need to adhere to the same strict rules on impartiality.

Pundits and former England strikers Ian Wright and Alan Shearer immediately tweeted that they would not take part either, followed by the programme's commentators.

Wright then said on his podcast on Saturday that he would quit the BBC if Lineker was sacked for good.

The BBC announced that the highlights show, a Saturday night fixture since 1964 and the longest-running football television programme in the world, would air without pundits or a presenter for the first time.

It also said players would not be asked for interviews after some indicated they would not be available in support of Lineker.

Adding to the chaos, sports presenters and pundits then pulled out of a slew of BBC radio and television shows on Saturday, forcing their cancellation and the airing of repeats and podcasts instead of live coverage.

"IMMEASURABLY CRUEL"

The row was sparked by Lineker's response to a video in which Home Secretary Suella Braverman unveiled plans to stop migrants crossing the Channel on small boats.

Lineker, the BBC's highest-paid star, wrote on Twitter: "This is just an immeasurably cruel policy directed at the most vulnerable people in language that is not dissimilar to that used by Germany in the '30s."

The Conservative government intends to outlaw asylum claims by all illegal arrivals and transfer them elsewhere, such as Rwanda, in a bid to stop the crossings, which totalled more than 45,000 last year.

A YouGov poll published on Monday showed 50 percent backing the measures, with 36 percent opposed.

But rights groups and the United Nations said the legislation would make Britain an international outlaw under European and UN conventions on asylum.

Some 36 Tory lawmakers have sent a letter to the BBC warning the affair will "no doubt shake many people's already fragile confidence" in the BBC's impartiality.

They are asking the BBC, which collects a licence fee from households with a television, for a full apology from Lineker.

The BBC's move sparked a wave of criticism from politicians and public figures, many of whom accused it of buckling to demands from Conservative politicians.

Sports correspondent Natalie Pirks posted a picture of a George Orwell statue outside the BBC building in a free-speech reference, while a petition calling for Lineker to be reinstated has attracted almost 160,000 signatures.

Former BBC director general Greg Dyke said the broadcaster had made a mistake.

"The real problem today is that the BBC has undermined its own credibility by doing this," he told the broadcaster, adding it could create the impression that the "BBC has bowed to government pressure".

SOCIAL MEDIA WARNING

The issue has brought to a head years of debate over BBC's impartiality, which intensified after Britain voted to leave the European Union in 2016.

Brexit supporters claimed that the corporation coverage was biased against them, while the left claimed that it allowed presenters to make disparaging remarks against former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn without punishment.

The Lineker row comes at a particularly heated period after it emerged that BBC chairman Richard Sharp allegedly facilitated a loan guarantee for former Prime Minister Boris Johnson while in the process of applying for the job.

BBC director-general Tim Davie warned staff about their use of social media when he took on the role at the end of 2020.

Lineker, a former Barcelona, Tottenham and Everton player, has hosted refugees at his home and has previously been vocal in his criticism of the government's handling of migrant crossings.

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2023-03-11 11:42:00Z
1828765535

'Unsuitably dressed' Malaysian woman denied entry into government agency - The Straits Times

IPOH - Another case of “inappropriate dressing” has occurred at a government building in Perak, this time with a woman being barred from entering the Companies Commission of Malaysia (SSM) office.

The woman, whose dress length was slightly above her knees, was denied entry into the building on Friday by a staff member who informed her that her attire failed to comply with the agency’s dress code.

In a video posted on Facebook, the woman could be heard asking the male staff member which part of her attire was not presentable. The man then continued to say that he could not let her go to the offices on the upper floors as her dressing did not follow the guidelines. He also said he was aware that he was being filmed, but had no issue with it.

When contacted later, the woman identified herself as Khor Hooi Chin, 41, from Pantai Remis, a coastal town in Manjung district about 1½ hours’ drive from Perak’s capital Ipoh.

Ms Khor said she was at the SSM building at 11am, but was stopped from entering by a guard.

The seafood supplier said she asked to speak to a staff member, who then came to tell her that she was not dressed according to the rules.

“I had to leave the premises and go to a mall to buy a longer skirt to wear with my original dress. After doing all that, I had to wait until 2.45pm for the office to reopen,” she said.

Ms Khor maintained that there was nothing sexy about her outfit, which was office wear.

“This is not the first time something like this has happened. We hear of it all the time, but nothing is ever done.

“In my case, I travelled from far away and wasted the entire day before being able to get my work done,” said a frustrated Ms Khor.

Attempts to reach State Entrepreneur Development Committee member Salbiah Mohamed for comment were unsuccessful. SSM falls under her portfolio.

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2023-03-11 03:49:04Z
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'Xi Jinping's guy': China's new premier Li Qiang, loyalist who oversaw Shanghai COVID-19 lockdown - CNA

PRO-BUSINESS STANCE

People who have interacted with Li say they found him practical-minded, an effective bureaucratic operator and supportive of the private sector.

Li was known for pushing greater economic integration of the Yangtze River Delta region as well as overseeing an expansion of Shanghai's free trade zone that now houses US automaker Tesla's China factory, as well as a slew of semiconductor and advanced manufacturing firms.

One Shanghai-based entrepreneur said he was surprised when Li responded to an unsolicited letter seeking help.

"He attended to our case and cleared the unnecessary regulatory obstacles for us, even though we were just a small private company," said the business owner, declining to be named given the sensitivity of discussing politics in China.

Zhou Dewen, who represented small and mid-sized enterprises in Wenzhou said Li came across as open-minded and willing to listen.

"He took a liberal approach of granting private companies default access to enter the market, except when explicitly banned by law, rather than the traditional approach of keeping private companies out by default," said Zhou.

Still, several observers said there are limits to what Li will be able to do, since Xi has steadily tightened Communist Party control.

"Li can make some repairs here and there, but he won't tear down the wall and build something new," said Chen Daoyin, former associate professor at Shanghai University of Political Science and Law, and now a commentator based in Chile.

Li is also the first premier in three decades to have no previous central government nor west China experience.

His predecessors – Zhu Rongji, Wen Jiabao and Li Keqiang – spent five years as executive vice-premier before being elevated to the top economic job.

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2023-03-11 03:14:00Z
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