Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Paulson admits U.S. economy in sharp decline

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on Tuesday described the economy as being in "sharp decline," the closest he has come yet to conceding an election-year recession has set in.

Appearing tired after a weekend of helping to broker a fire sale takeover of Wall Street investment bank Bear Stearns to keep it from outright collapse, Paulson pushed back against efforts to have him admit a recession was under way.

"There's no doubt that the American people know that the economy has turned down sharply. So to me much less important is the label that's placed on it today. Much more important is what we do about it," he told NBC's Today Show.

Paulson also appeared on ABC's "Good Morning America" where he claimed the Bush administration's $152-billion fiscal stimulus program could generate hundreds of thousands of jobs once tax rebate checks begin flowing in May.

"It will start making a difference here in the second and third quarter, maybe adding 500,000 or more jobs," he said without elaborating about the sectors that might create jobs.

Checks of $600 for individuals and $1,200 for couples are to start being issued on May 2.

Treasury officials, in cooperation with the Federal Reserve, worked nonstop last weekend to help engineer the $2-a-share takeover of Bear Stearns by JPMorgan as they sought to restore some stability to shell-shocked financial markets.

Fed policy-makers were meeting on Tuesday amid expectations their next step will be to slash interest rates by a whopping 1 percent to try to give the flagging U.S. economy a lift.

But the turbulence that persists in markets, analysts say, stems substantially from a loss of confidence that has made ordinary investors wary and threatens to become an outright credit crunch as banks and financial institutions become reluctant to make loans or to take risks.

Paulson insisted Treasury was "all over" the turbulence in capital markets and said he did not think Bear Stearns shareholders believe they have been bailed out by the Federal Reserve.

"The big focus on the part of all policy makers is to minimize the spillover to the real economy. We need to keep our capital markets stable, functioning well," Paulson told NBC.

He said he had great confidence in U.S. capital markets, saying they were resilient and flexible, but it would take some time to work through the turbulence.

The latest evidence on Tuesday pointed to continuing and extended problems for economic policy-makers. Government data showed so-called core wholesale prices, excluding food and energy, measured by the Producer Price Index climbed at the fastest pace in February in more than a year.

Construction starts on new houses declined another 0.6 percent and applications for building permits tumbled 7.8 percent in February, an indicator that the deterioration in the U.S. housing sector will continue to worsen for some time.

(Reporting by David Lawder and Andy Sullivan; Writing by Glenn Somerville; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

Fed cuts rates by 0.75 points

Two dissents show disagreement on board

By Greg Robb & Laura Mandaro, MarketWatch
Last update: 2:24 p.m. EDT March 18, 2008

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - Stopping short of giving the market everything it wanted, the Federal Reserve cut a key interest rate by three quarters of one percentage point on Tuesday.

The Fed action takes the federal funds rate target down to 2.25%, the lowest since December 2004.

The Fed said the size of the rate cut was enough to promote growth.

"Today's policy action, combined with those taken earlier, including measures to foster market liquidity, should help to promote moderate growth over time and to mitigate the risks to economic activity," the Fed said.

But the market had expected more.

Based on futures trading in Chicago, investor's bets implied a 100% chance of a cut of one percentage point. Read complete Fed coverage.

The Fed did leave the door open for more cuts.

In its statement, the Fed said downside risks remain and it would act in a timely manner if needed.

Dallas Fed president Richard Fisher and Philadelphia Fed president Charles Plosser dissented in favor of less aggressive action.

The rate cut comes seven weeks after the central banks last lowered the benchmark overnight rate.

The Fed has slashed interest rates by a cumulative two percentage points so far this year, ranking it among the most abrupt rate-cutting sprees in the modern history of the U.S. central bank.

Some Fed watchers had warned that a full percentage point rate cut was more than the central bankers could stomach, especially because of the drop in the foreign exchange value of the dollar.

"They've got to be worried about the value of the dollar," said Vince Reinhart, a former top staffer at the Fed and now an analyst at the conservative American Enterprise Institute think-tank.

This week, the dollar hit record lows versus the euro and the Swiss franc and a twelve-and-a-half-year low versus the yen. Read complete market coverage.

But before the meeting, currency traders said the dollar would continue lower no matter what the Fed did. Many are agitating for coordinated currency intervention.

Another factor explaining the smaller-than-expected rate cut was concern about inflation.
Earlier this morning, the government reported rising prices at the wholesale level.

The core rate of the producer price index rose 0.5% in February and was up 2.4% year-on-year. See full story.

"The Fed is concerned about inflation," said Mickey Levy, chief economist at Bank of America.

In its statement, the Fed said "uncertainty about the inflation outlook has increased."

But the central banks said it expects inflation to moderate in coming quarters as energy and other commodity prices level out and slower growth eases pressures on goods.

Running out of room to maneuver.

Former Fed officials are increasingly calling for Congress and the Bush Administration to do more to help the economy, especially by assisting homeowners struggling to stay in their homes.
The government may also have to take steps to provide more capital to the banking system. The Fed's actions are essentially temporary.

The Fed has taken several extraordinary actions in the past week.

Most importantly, the Fed agreed for the first time to lend billions of dollars to investment firms that are holding complex mortgage securities that have fallen sharply in value. End of Story

Single-family housing starts sink to 17-year low

Building permits drop 7.8%, biggest decline in 13 years

By Rex Nutting, MarketWatch
Last update: 9:42 a.m. EDT March 18, 2008

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- With no end in sight to the housing bust, new construction on single-family homes dropped by 6.7% in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 707,000, the lowest in 17 years, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday.

Starts of single-family homes have plunged 62% since the peak two years ago.
"The housing recession is intensifying," wrote Harm Bandholz, economist for UniCredit Markets.

Total housing starts, including multifamily units, dropped 0.6% in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.065 million, better than the 990,000 pace expected by economists surveyed by MarketWatch. See Economic Calendar.

January's starts were revised higher to a 1.071 million pace from 1.012 million reported initially.
Building permits, a leading indicator of construction, fell 7.8% in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 978,000, the lowest since the autumn of 1991. It was the biggest monthly decline in 13 years. Read the full report.

Permits for single-family homes dropped 6.2% in February to a 639,000 annual pace, a 17-year low. Single-family permits are down 65% from the peak.

The report confirms that home building remains extremely weak, with home prices falling and sales tumbling.

"It is clear that we have not yet reached the bottom, and still have a considerable way to go before that claim can be plausibly made," wrote Richard Moody, chief economist for Mission Residential.

The data are likely to have little impact on deliberations at the Federal Reserve later Tuesday. The Fed is expected to slash interest rates, perhaps by an unprecedented full percentage point. The Fed is intently focused on daily conditions in financial markets, and expects a very slow recovery for the housing market.

In a separate report, the Labor Department said producer prices rose 0.3% in February. Core prices, which exclude food and energy, rose 0.5%, more than expected. See full story.

In the past year, housing starts are down 28.4%. Single-family starts are down 40.5%. Building permits are down 36.5% in the past year, while single-family permits are down 41.9%, the biggest drop in 26 years.

The government cautions that its housing data are volatile and subject to large sampling and other statistical errors. In most months, the government can't be sure whether starts increased or decreased. In February, for instance, the standard error for starts was plus or minus 11.2%. Large revisions are common.

It can take four months for a new trend in housing starts to emerge from the data. In the past four months, housing starts have averaged 1.08 million annualized, down from 1.13 million in the four months ending in January.

On Monday, the National Association of Home Builders reported builder sentiment remained at extremely low levels in March, barely bouncing off a record-low set in December.

Details

Starts of multifamily units rose 14.5% in February, continuing a boom in apartment building. Multifamily starts are up 23% in the past year.

Regionally, starts fell 28% in the Northeast, were flat in the Midwest, rose 3.9% in the South and rose 5.1% in the West.

Housing completions fell 8.8% in February to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.208 million, the lowest in 12 years. Home builders are trying to work off their excess inventories, but still have too many homes in the pipeline for the number of sales. End of Story

Rex Nutting is Washington bureau chief of MarketWatch.

Planned Parenthood Racism Investigation

YouTube
March 18, 2008


Plunging U.S. dollar must be addressed

Kansas City Star
Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Bear Stearns survived the Great Depression, but it was done in by the great unwinding that began with the subprime mortgage meltdown.

During the weekend, JP Morgan Chase & Co. agreed to buy Bear for a mere $2 a share — 1 percent of its value more than two weeks ago.

The Federal Reserve made the right move in underwriting this historic transaction.

With other banks refusing to extend the credit Bear Stearns needed to process transactions, the only alternative for the investment house was bankruptcy.

That, in turn, would threaten to bring down other Wall Street institutions as well.

Bear Stearns’ spectacular fall highlighted the rapid collapse of confidence in long-time Wall Street banks as the credit-market crisis continued with no end in sight.

Full article here.

Retailers Accept Foreign Currency as Dollar Withers

Sharon McLoone
Washington Post
Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Some small retailers that include transatlantic tourists and other jet-setters among customers are accepting euros as the dollar's value dwindles worldwide.

Washington Post Staff Writer Alejandro Lazo reports today that a small falafel shop in D.C.'s Adams Morgan district has joined the trend.

Scott and Arianne Bennett, who own a Mediterranean sandwich shop, "are joining a number of businesses in tourist-heavy areas that have begun accepting the euro and other foreign currencies," he reports.

The store hasn't made any significant practical changes to accommodate the currency.

"Conversion sheets are kept near the store's cash register for employees manning the counter. Dollar prices on the menu are converted at the register, and change is returned in dollars. The couple's local Bank of America branch accepts deposits of the foreign currency at no additional charge," according to the story.

The trend is catching on. In tourist-laden Dupont Circle, Claude Taylor, a 44-year-old photographer who owns a studio there, began accepting euros last week for prints of his travel photography.

A financial crisis unmatched since the Great Depression, say analysts

This article appeared in the Guardian on Tuesday March 18 2008 on p4 of the Top stories section. It was last updated at 00:09 on March 18 2008.

A century after John Pierpont Morgan rescued the New York stockmarket from a 50% sell off in share prices, his blue-blooded Wall Street bank was yesterday once again at the heart of attempts to contain the deepening global financial crisis.

In an echo of the "bankers' panic" of 1907, JP Morgan responded to what is being billed as a meltdown of historic proportions by agreeing to buy its stricken rival, Bear Stearns.

The length and severity of the crisis that broke over global markets last summer has had analysts delving into their history books. George Soros, who was largely responsible for Black Wednesday, the last bout of serious financial turmoil to afflict the UK, believes there has been nothing to match the events of the past nine months since the Great Depression.

Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Fed and the man blamed by many for setting off the boom-bust in the US housing market, agrees with the man who broke the Bank of England. Writing in the Financial Times yesterday, Greenspan said: "The current financial crisis in the US is likely to be judged as the most wrenching since the end of the second world war."

The first 25 years after the war were relatively trouble free. Britain had devalued the pound in 1949 and 1967, but the first real systemic threat to the financial system arrived in 1973 with the secondary banking crisis that affected the "fringe banks" that had provided money to speculators during the property boom. When the crash came, the Bank of England launched a "lifeboat" to prevent the crisis spreading.

Similar action by the Federal Reserve in 1998 contained the fallout from the collapse of Long Term Capital Management, a hedge fund that lost money in the aftermath of Russia's decision to default on its debts. By comparison with recent events, LTCM now seems to be a minor market wobble.

Students of the markets say the only recent parallel with the current turmoil is Japan in the 1990s, but other than that they have had to study the 1930s, when 9,000 banks failed, 1907 when JP Morgan told Wall Street enough was enough after a 50% drop in shares, and even to the series of economic and financial upheavals during the final quarter of the 19th century.

Ben Bernanke, chairman of the Fed, spent years as an academic studying the Great Depression and his actions over the past six months have been interpreted as a sign that he is determined the lessons from the past should be understood.

Julian Jessop at Capital Economics said: "In our view the Fed is taking the right steps to prevent the recession from developing into a full blown depression that resembles the debt/deflation spiral that Japan found itself trapped in for more than a decade in the 1990s, or even the economic and financial disasters in the final quarter of the 19th century and the 1930s in the US."

Jessop added that all three episodes were characterised by the central bank's failure to prevent the money supply from contracting. "What we have seen from day one in this crisis is that the Fed recognises it needs to take whatever steps are necessary to prevent the money supply from falling and to inject as much liquidity as required to prevent a Japanese-style debt/deflation spiral from developing."

Japan's problems in the 1990s were caused by the pricking of a real estate and stock market bubble in the late 1980s that resulted in banks seeking to liquidate massive losses. The Japanese government was criticised for failing to take action quickly enough to prevent the economy suffering a series of recessions. Unlike today, however, the crisis had no global reach; the rest of the world boomed as Japan languished.

America was conned - who will pay?


The South Sea Bubble ended in riots as trust was lost. Wall Street also duped the public

This article appeared in the Guardian on Monday March 17 2008 on p30 of the Financial section. It was last updated at 00:05 on March 17 2008.

Bear Stearns marks the moment when the global financial crisis went critical. Up until last Friday, it had been possible - just about - to believe that the worst was over and that things were about to get better. That pretence was stripped away when JP Morgan, at the behest of the Federal Reserve, stepped in when the hedge funds pulled the plug on the fifth-biggest US investment bank.

It is now clear that no end is in sight to the turmoil, and the reason for that is that the Fed and the US treasury are no closer to solving the underlying problem than they were eight months ago. The crisis will only end when house prices stop falling and banks stop racking up huge losses on their loans. Doing that, however, will require the US government to intervene directly in the real estate market to end the wave of foreclosures. Ideologically, it is ill-equipped to take that step and, as a result, property prices will fall and the financial meltdown will go on and on.

Ultimately, though, action will be taken because there will be political pressure for it. Indeed, it is somewhat surprising that there is not already rioting in the streets, given the gigantic fraud perpetrated by the financial elite at the expense of ordinary Americans.

The US has just had its weakest period of expansion since the 1950s. Consumption growth has been poor. Investment growth has been modest. Exports have been sluggish. But if you are at the top of the tree, the years since the last recession in 2001 has been a veritable golden age. Salaries for executives have rocketed and profits have soared, because the productivity gains from a growing economy have been disproportionately skewed towards capital.

Patriotic

For ordinary Americans, though, it has been a different story. Real wages have been growing slowly; at just 1.6% a year on average over the latest upswing, well down on the experience of earlier decades. Business, of course, needs consumers to carry on spending in order to make money, so a way had to be found to persuade households to do their patriotic duty. The method chosen was simple. Whip up a colossal housing bubble, convince consumers that it makes sense to borrow money against the rising value of their homes to supplement their meagre real wage growth and watch the profits roll in.

As they did - for a while. Now it's payback time and the mood could get very ugly. Americans, to put it bluntly, have been conned. They have been duped by a bunch of serpent-tongued hucksters who packed up the wagon and made it across the county line before a lynch mob could be formed.

The debate now is not about whether the US is in recession but how deep and long that recession will be. Super-bears have started to say that this is perhaps "The Big One", by which they mean the onset of a new Great Depression. The need to rescue Bear Stearns has done little to still those voices.

As the economics team at HSBC recently pointed out, there has been a "catastrophic breakdown" of trust, and when that has happened in the past - the US in the 1930s, Japan in the 1990s - chucking extra money at the banks in the hope that they will start lending again proves ineffective.

It's not hard to see why trust has become such a rare commodity: Wall Street at the height of the securitisation mania had, in effect, become London at the time of the South Sea Bubble crisis in 1720. Vast quantities of funny paper were changing hands even though those involved in the deals had no idea of their true worth. Nor did they care. Inevitably, now the bubble has burst and the huge Ponzi securitisation scam has been exposed, there has been a reaction. The securitisation market is dead, there is less money sloshing round the system, banks are hoarding their cash.

Having allowed the housing boom to rage out of control for too long and then delaying cuts in interest rates until the housing market was gripped by recessionary forces, the Fed is now trying to make up for lost time with a burst of hyperactivity. It will cut interest rates on Wednesday and keep cutting them: financial markets expect the Fed funds rate to be 1% by the summer, and they are probably right. In most downturns, easier monetary policy does the trick. Lower interest rates make it cheaper to borrow and also change the trade-off between saving and spending. This may not be the usual sort of downturn, however, with consumers going through a period of debt revulsion after the excesses of recent years, even so the consensus is that after two or three quarters of falling output, a slow and sluggish recovery will be under way.

Deflation

These hopes are likely to be dashed, unless there is intervention at home and internationally to tackle the crisis. Domestically, the priority should be to stop homes that have been foreclosed being auctioned on the open market, since by selling them at a 50% discount property prices are driven down. The US does not seem to have learned the lessons from Japan, which encouraged a fire sale of property in the 1990s and was sucked into a classic debt deflation trap as a result. Those who argue, with some force, that it would be counter-productive to intervene in the market because the US needs to work the rottenness out of its system must recognise that the cold turkey option will be very long and painful.

The second form of intervention should be to shore up the dollar, the collapse of which is worrying countries that rely heavily on exports and is the main reason for the surge in commodity prices. Co-ordinated intervention by the major central banks needs to be at the top of the agenda at next month's G7 meeting in Washington, and there could be action even sooner if the dollar continues to tank.

In the longer term, lessons must be learnt from the turmoil. One is that you don't solve the problems of a collapsing bubble by blowing up another, which is what Alan Greenspan did after the dotcom fiasco in 2001 - the most irresponsible behaviour of any central banker in living memory.

The second lesson is that there has to be far stricter regulation not just of the US real estate market but of Wall Street, to prevent the return of irresponsible lending as soon as the recovery is firmly under way. If this is, heaven help us, The Big One, one of the only consolations will be that the repugnance at the orgy of speculation that has sapped the strength of the US economy will put a new New Deal on the political agenda.

But for this to happen there has to be a political response and even though this year's presidential election will be held in the shadow of recession, there appears not to be a potential FDR among the contenders for the White House. Yet if this crisis really does get as bad as some are forecasting, the public will rightly demand more than a slap on the wrist for Wall Street.
larry.elliott@guardian.co.uk

The Federal Reserve Is Destroying America

Lee Rogers
Funny Money Report
March 18, 2008

It is incredible to see the rampant devaluation of the U.S. Dollar. The Federal Reserve just hours ago made a rare cut of 25 basis points during the weekend which will cause even more inflation. Gold immediately moved up $20 an ounce and the U.S. Dollar Index plunged under 71 in international trading. If this type of market activity continues the U.S. Dollar will have no value in a few months. While it is probably unlikely that we will see a hyper-inflationary collapse of the U.S. Dollar within the next few months, these policies are entirely unsustainable. If the Federal Reserve does not move to defend the value of the U.S. Dollar we will eventually see a hyper-inflationary collapse and worldwide financial turmoil. This view is also shared by other well respected financial analysts. Peter Schiff recently raised concerns about a hyper-inflationary collapse of the U.S. Dollar, Robert Reich a former Clinton cabinet member believes we are facing a depression and Alan Greenspan the man who caused this whole mess wrote in the Financial Times stating that we are facing the worst financial crisis since World War II. What’s amazing is that the Federal Reserve isn’t even trying to protect the U.S. Dollar because all they care about is saving the power of their private banking cartel. They don’t care about the U.S. Dollar nor do they care about the country itself. They are destroying this country through their actions and there needs to be an investigation into the controllers of this bank.

Alan Greenspan saying that we are facing the worst financial crisis since World War II is like a killer returning to the scene of their crime and explaining the results of their crime. Greenspan recently told nations in the Gulf to drop their currency pegs to the U.S. Dollar which encouraged a further drop in the U.S. Dollar. Greenspan’s Financial Times article will cause an even greater acceleration in the collapse of the currency. As the former head of the Federal Reserve, his comments still hold a great deal of importance with people around the world. This means that his comments can literally move the value of the U.S. Dollar one way or another. It is incredibly sick how Greenspan can get away with creating the current crisis we face with his low interest rate policies earlier this decade and analyze the problems that are occurring today that were a result of his own policies with no criticism from the corporate controlled media.

JP Morgan announced that it is completing its buyout of Bear Stearns marking further consolidation in the financial industry. Last Friday, the Federal Reserve with JP Morgan stepped in and bailed them out from going out of business. This was an unprecedented move by the Federal Reserve stepping in and bailing out a failed financial institution.

JP Morgan will buy Bear Stearns for $2 a share which is amazing considering that this stock was trading for around $50 a share just weeks ago. There’s also talk that Lehman Brothers and other large financial institutions might be facing a similar fate.

The U.S. Mint announced that it wants to start melting pennies using steel. According to the U.S. Mint it is now costing them 2 cents to produce every penny and 10 cents to produce every dime. Instead of targeting the real problem which is the Federal Reserve, they’ve decided they want to change the melt content of the coins which completely ignores what’s really happening. The U.S. Mint should be questioning the irrational policies of the Federal Reserve which has caused inflation to run out of control. It’s the Federal Reserve that is causing the metal prices to cost more which is resulting in the production cost of the coins to skyrocket. This is not very difficult to figure out.

There’s no question that inflation is out of control in this country considering that gold, silver, oil and food prices are skyrocketing. In order to provide even more liquidity for the banks, the Federal Reserve made a rare 25 basis point rate cut over the weekend and are poised to potentially cut rates again this week even as early as tomorrow. This is going to be catastrophic for the U.S. Dollar.

With all this going on it is amazing to see characters like George W. Bush and Henry Paulson state that the economy is doing just fine and not to worry about what’s happening. White House Press Secretary Dana Perino also stated at a recent press conference that she is not allowed to talk about the value of the U.S. Dollar and that all questions pertaining to the U.S. Dollar needs to be directed towards the U.S. Treasury. Of course Paulson the U.S. Treasury Secretary has absolutely no control over the value of the U.S. Dollar because that responsibility lies with the Federal Reserve since they set interest rates and fix the value of the currency. Amazingly when Ben Bernanke the head of the Federal Reserve testified in front of Congress, he directed any questions about the value of the U.S. Dollar to the U.S. Treasury despite the fact that he controls the value of money through their policies. This is absurd. They treat us like we are a bunch of idiots, and this is an obvious attempt by the establishment not to talk about the collapsing currency which is one of the biggest issues of the day right now.

There are even tent cities popping up in California. Of course the Federal Reserve can spend billions to bailout banks, but they won’t help the average middle class homeowner that might be thrown out into the streets as a result of what they did through their policies. When will people understand that the Federal Reserve is a private central bank that is merely looking to preserve the interests of the banking cartel?

Bush has confirmed that he will be meeting with the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets otherwise known as the Plunge Protection Team this week. There’s no doubt that this will be an important meeting considering the recent events in the financial markets. It is clear that this group stepped in today to suppress the gold price. After a $20 spike during international trading, gold has lost all of its gains and the U.S. Dollar has seen an amazing recovery. This is totally ridiculous considering the combination of the Bear Stearns news, Greenspan’s outlook in the Financial Times and the rate cut. These people generally step in to move the price of gold down on days when you would normally expect it to move higher in price and today was no exception. Even the most novice of investors can understand that this type of activity makes absolutely no sense without market manipulation.

At this point it seems pretty certain that we are facing an inflationary depression. What’s awful is that much of this is being done by design. The Federal Reserve would prefer to save the banking cartel instead of doing what’s best for the American people. A stable U.S. Dollar would be what’s best for the American people but of course they aren’t moving in that direction. It is likely that we are seeing the start of a domino collapse in the U.S. financial system and it’s going to get ugly. If you haven’t bought gold or silver already you are completely insane. In the next few years we may very well see a point in time where you can buy an ounce of gold for the same value as the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Only when we reach close to those levels will we know that we might be near a top in the gold price and even that is being conservative considering what’s happening.

Dollar decline ‘deeply worries’ Wen


By Richard McGregor in Beijin
The Financial Times
Published: March 18 2008 07:52 | Last updated: March 18 2008 08:27

Wen Jiabao, China’s premier, said he is “deeply worried” about the US and global economy and the fallout from the continuing weakness of the greenback against other currencies.

Mr Wen, speaking at the annual news conference at the close of the National People’s Congress, said he was confident about China being able to maintain “fast and steady” growth this year but conceded the country’s economy was not immune from world events.

“Global economic developments cannot but have an impact on China,” he said. “As I have said before, 2008 might be the most difficult year for China’s economy, because there are a lot of uncertainties both inside and outside the country. It makes it more difficult to make decisions.”

Mr Wen said it was “particularly noteworthy” that the renminbi, China’s currency, had been appreciating more rapidly in recent months, but he expressed concern about persistent US dollar weakness.

He said he was concerned about “when the US dollar might reach bottom and what kind of (monetary) policy the US would adopt (in response).

Mr Wen also acknowledged that China might struggle to reach its inflation goal for 2008 of 4.8 per cent, after January and February recorded monthly inflation rates of 7.1 and 8.7 per cent respectively.

Asked whether he would sacrifice economic output to bring down inflation at the possible risk of increasing the jobless rate, Mr Wen indicated that growth and employment remained the overarching priorities.

“We must ensure that our economy will grow at a proper rate in order to ensure employment,” he said.

“China is a developing country with 1.3bn people. We have to maintain a certain degree of fast economic growth to provide enough jobs.”

He said that China needed to add about 10m jobs a year for the next five years, a lower figure than what officials have used in the past when the rule of thumb was employment growth of 15-20m jobs a year.

Other issues emphasised by Mr Wen included increased agricultural investment to lift food output, the need to conserve energy and protect the environment and to rebuild welfare, health and education systems.