What happened to the China credit crisis?
(2016-09-10 08:55:54)SCMP,
How to predict nine out of the next five China crises...
For the
past four years, analysts at
Look at the current situation: China’s banks are still very liquid; loan growth has stayed at a 10 per cent clip; public confidence in the banks is unquestioned; and external debts are manageable.
It is true
that the number of officially reported bad debts may be only a
fraction of the actual figures.
And, it is
worth highlighting that non-bank financial institutions in China
have fared much worse in the current economic downturn. A large
number of crippled
A slower economy is the cause of banking distress in China and parts of Europe. But if the governments of Italy, Greece, Portugal and Spain had China’s kind of total freedom in setting fiscal and monetary policies, their own banking sector distress would be much easier to manage.
Since this kind of banking distress, in most cases, is a reflection of a slower economy, it is natural to wonder how Beijing is going to boost growth. I think the government, knowingly or unknowingly, is experimenting with just how much of an economic slowdown the country can tolerate. Beijing is clearly not priming the pump as much as it is capable of doing.
The last
stimulus in 2008 has
So what do we make of supply-side reforms? Sadly, I believe the push for reforms is mostly lip service at present since Beijing is not cutting taxes, red tape is still a big headache, and state-owned enterprises, instead of being sold or downsized, are regaining dominance at the expense of private-sector rivals.
Rural land
reform is unfolding slowly. Farmers need the reform to benefit from
economies of scale, and to be able to use their land as collateral
for bank credit. It is safe to expect the market value of rural
land to rise significantly on the back of the reforms. This is long
overdue, as the country’s
Overall, China’s economy is probably not growing at present, judging from power consumption and transport volumes. But it is a blessing in disguise. A recession is a much-needed shock if China wants to transform its economy into one led by domestic consumption. In such a transition, banks would suffer enormous pain, obviously, but it is far too simplistic to predict a banking crisis.
Joe Zhang is the chairman of China Smartpay Group, and a formermanager at the People’s Bank of China.