Macroeconomic regulation and control (simplified Chinese : 宏观调控 ; traditional Chinese : 宏觀調控 ; pinyin : Hóngguān tiáokòng ) often abbreviated Macro-control (simplified Chinese : 宏调 ; traditional Chinese : 宏調 ; pinyin : Hóngtiáo ) refers to the use of direct government intervention by the central government of the People's Republic of China to cool down the overheated economy . The policy was first introduced in 1993 by Zhu Rongji , Premier of the People's Republic of China and Governor of the People's Bank of China at the time. His policies included collective measures to constrain monetary policy , suppress real estate and stock markets , control inflation , lower supplies of raw materials and reduce domestic consumption . The purpose was to achieve a so-called soft landing of an economy that was growing too fast.
As all these measures can vastly affect the economy and political stability, macro-control has become a hot topic to economic and political observers of the People's Republic of China.[ 1]
See also
References
^ L. Goff, Brian (1996). Regulation and macroeconomic performance . USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.