Premier Li Keqiang said Tuesday China is capable of forestalling systemic financial risks, ruling out the possibility of such risks in the country.[Special Coverage]
"The fundamentals of the Chinese economy are sound and the financial sector is stable," Li told a press conference after the conclusion of the annual session of China's national legislature.
The capital adequacy and provision coverage ratios of Chinese banks are higher than international standards, Li said, adding that China's huge deposit reserves in the banking system will also help cushion risks.
Prevention of financial risks is key for China in what policy makers called the three tough battles, namely defusing major risks, reducing poverty and tackling pollution.
The country is moving swiftly and decisively to curb financial risks and crack down on market violations. The insurance regulator in February announced a decision to take over Anbang Insurance Group for a year after the company was found involved into illegal business practices that may seriously threaten its solvency.
"Such moves...aim to prevent the risks from spreading. We will continue to resolutely deal with similar risk points in the future," Li said.
National lawmakers have approved the merger of the country's banking and insurance regulators as part of a massive institutional restructuring scheme, which, Li said, will prevent the occurrence of regulation evasion.
The government has lowered the fiscal deficit target by 0.4 percentage points to 2.6 percent of GDP for 2018. "We brought down the target on our own initiative as the economy steadied and fiscal incomes surpassed expectations," Li said, signaling more cuts in the future.
But the reduction does not mean a change in China's proactive fiscal policy, he added.
Li said he is confident that China will fulfill main economic and social development goals this year. China's GDP growth target was set at around 6.5 percent for 2018.