<p>Beijing: China will adopt an "appropriately loose" monetary policy next year as part of steps to support economic growth, state media reported on Monday citing a Politburo meeting, marking the first such shift towards loosening since 2010.</p><p>China will implement a more proactive fiscal policy and step up "unconventional" counter-cyclical adjustments, <em>Xinhua</em> reported, citing the Politburo.</p><p>China must also "vigorously" boost consumption and expand domestic demand "in all directions", <em>Xinhua</em> said.</p><p>The remarks came from an official readout of a meeting of top Communist Party officials, the Politburo, and before the annual Central Economic Work Conference later this week to set key targets and policy intentions for next year.</p>.Explained | How China became the world's largest car exporter.<p>In 2025, authorities must adhere to "the principle of pursuing progress while maintaining stability", leveraging progress to ensure stability and drive innovation, <em>Xinhua</em> said.</p><p>"A more proactive fiscal policy and an appropriately loose monetary policy should be implemented, enhancing and refining the policy toolkit, strengthening extraordinary counter-cyclical adjustments," it said.</p><p>The new wording for the monetary policy marks the first easing of the stance since late 2010, according to official announcements on the Politburo meetings.</p><p>The central bank has outlined five policy stances - “loose”, “appropriately loose”, “prudent”, “appropriately tight” and “tight” - with flexibility on either side of each.</p><p>China adopted an “appropriately loose” monetary policy after the 2008 global financial crisis, before switching to “prudent” in late 2010.</p>
<p>Beijing: China will adopt an "appropriately loose" monetary policy next year as part of steps to support economic growth, state media reported on Monday citing a Politburo meeting, marking the first such shift towards loosening since 2010.</p><p>China will implement a more proactive fiscal policy and step up "unconventional" counter-cyclical adjustments, <em>Xinhua</em> reported, citing the Politburo.</p><p>China must also "vigorously" boost consumption and expand domestic demand "in all directions", <em>Xinhua</em> said.</p><p>The remarks came from an official readout of a meeting of top Communist Party officials, the Politburo, and before the annual Central Economic Work Conference later this week to set key targets and policy intentions for next year.</p>.Explained | How China became the world's largest car exporter.<p>In 2025, authorities must adhere to "the principle of pursuing progress while maintaining stability", leveraging progress to ensure stability and drive innovation, <em>Xinhua</em> said.</p><p>"A more proactive fiscal policy and an appropriately loose monetary policy should be implemented, enhancing and refining the policy toolkit, strengthening extraordinary counter-cyclical adjustments," it said.</p><p>The new wording for the monetary policy marks the first easing of the stance since late 2010, according to official announcements on the Politburo meetings.</p><p>The central bank has outlined five policy stances - “loose”, “appropriately loose”, “prudent”, “appropriately tight” and “tight” - with flexibility on either side of each.</p><p>China adopted an “appropriately loose” monetary policy after the 2008 global financial crisis, before switching to “prudent” in late 2010.</p>