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State-owned enterprises
China

‘Skyrocketing’ debt at state firms among biggest challenges facing China’s economy

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Li Yang, former deputy-director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said China’s new financial oversight regime may be finalised in months.
Wendy Wuin Beijing

Mounting debt and slow reform at state-owned enterprises are the biggest challenges to China’s economic outlook, according to a leading expert.

“The biggest risk is the huge buildup of credit relative to GDP, though it is not an across-the-board problem,” Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told the South China Morning Post on the sidelines of the Boao Forum yesterday.

“The buildup of credit is primarily in state-owned enterprises,” he said. “If you look at private companies in the industrial sector, their leverage ratio is actually going down.

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“The leverage ratio for state firms is skyrocketing. Some of them are not borrowing money to cover investment, but to cover their operating costs.”

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That is one of the concerns economists noted in the wake of the lending spree in January when new bank credit hit an all-time high of 2.51 trillion yuan (HK$3 trillion).

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New loans fell by more than one third in February after the central bank instructed banks to rein in the lending, to prevent the market from misinterpreting that it was loosening policy strongly like it did in 2009.

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