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China s debt - Coming clean

2016-07-12 12:32:19

Plans to rein in credit slowly take shape

Jul 9th 2016 | SHANGHAI

AS ANYONE who has conquered addiction knows, the first step is admitting that

you have a problem. China, hooked on debt for much of the past decade, may be

reaching that point. In recent weeks officials have talked at length about the

country s troubling reliance on credit to fuel growth. They have also sketched

out a range of possible solutions. It is only a start withdrawal symptoms in

the form of defaults and slower growth are sure to hurt, and could yet prompt a

relapse. But the new tone is encouraging nonetheless.

The frankest admission came in a front-page article in the People s Daily,

mouthpiece of the Communist Party, in early May. An anonymous authoritative

person , widely believed to be Liu He, an economic adviser to President Xi

Jinping, warned that high leverage could spark a systemic financial crisis.

China s total debt load jumped from less than 150% of GDP in 2008 to more than

250% at the end of last year. Increases of that size have presaged economic

trouble in other countries.

Last month the government convened its first news conference on the topic,

bringing together officials from the finance ministry, the central bank, the

banking regulator and a top planning agency. The Chinese Academy of Social

Sciences, a prominent official think-tank, has also opined on it. The research

arm of the central bank has published a paper with a section on what can be

done. And this week, a forum in Beijing gathered officials, bankers and

academics to sift through the suggestions.

All of them have homed in on corporate debt as the main worry. That is obvious

enough from a quick comparison with other big economies: China sits in the

middle of the pack for total debt but is at the high end for corporate

liabilities (see chart). Yet it marks a change of tone from recent years, when

officials focused on cleaning up the debt of local government. This presented a

more immediate but smaller problem, and also a more manageable one.

The most important outcome from all the discussions has been an outline, albeit

rough, of how China hopes to tackle its burden. There will be no rush to

deleverage. Sun Xuegong, a central planner, said China would start by slowing

the rise in its debt-to-GDP ratio before guiding it lower, trying to avoid too

much collateral damage to the economy in the process.

Officials think they can cushion the blow from eventual deleveraging in three

ways. First, they want to get more bang from new debt. That, in theory, means

choking off credit to underperforming state-owned firms or restructuring them

in the image of their sleeker private-sector peers. Loans would flow to better

firms generating higher returns.

Second, they want equity financing to help replace debt. That is tough, given

the woeful state of the stockmarket after last year s crash. But there are

other ways. Regulators are working on a programme under which banks will swap

some loans to indebted companies for equity stakes instead. Banks have pushed

back, fearing that they will be saddled with bad investments. Officials insist

that only viable companies will receive this treatment.

Finally, the government will use fiscal policy to prop up growth, in effect

transferring debt from corporate balance-sheets to its own. That makes sense:

official public debt is low, at less than 50% of GDP, while state-owned

companies are the biggest debtors. However, direct bail-outs would give state

firms little reason to improve their operations. So the central bank s

researchers suggest other measures, such as tax cuts, which would improve the

business environment for all.

Scepticism about whether China will end its credit binge is warranted. Last

December the government identified deleveraging as one of its main tasks for

2016. Yet credit issuance has outpaced economic growth by a wide margin,

raising overall debt levels. And China s approach to state firms is

inconsistent. Officials recognise that getting them to operate more like

private firms, constrained by budgets, is critical to controlling debt. But at

the same time the Communist Party recently reiterated that they must obtain its

approval before making any big decisions. China is sure to keep one promise, at

least: there will be no speedy resolution to its debt problems.