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Fresh warnings to debt-ridden China of living on borrowed time

International Monetary Fund, ratings agency both raise red flags about country’s liabilities

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Beijing has shifted attention away from growth targets, but international institutions are hearing rumblings from China’s debt mountain that are too loud to ignore, and have urged Beijing to tackle causes before it is too late. Photo: AFP
Jane Caiin Beijing

Everything is under control, if China’s repeated assurances about its debt mountain are to be believed.

Over the past two years, the country’s leadership under President Xi Jinping has made debt reduction an economic priority, especially loans amassed by local governments and state-owned enterprises (SOEs).

Beijing has also shifted attention away from growth targets, taking some of the pressure off lower-level authorities to use borrowing to finance rapid expansion.

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But international institutions are again hearing rumblings from the debt mountain that are too loud to ignore, and have urged Beijing to tackle causes before it is too late.

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Ratings agency Moody’s and the International Monetary Fund have both issued fresh warnings about China’s debt in the past week.

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