Among
the many inadequately understood facets of China's post-reform economy
is the role of its banking system. Before the reform, the country's
banking assets were concentrated in a few banks, especially the
top four. The system itself was a secondary instrument in macroeconomic
policy, implementing the overall cash and credit plans of the state,
besides providing working capital support to state owned enterprises.
The consensus is that the role played by these institutions has
changed dramatically in recent years, with their involvement in
credit provision for investment purposes having increased substantially.
That transformation came to the fore after 2008 when the Chinese
government decided to launch a huge stimulus package to address
the effects of the global crisis on the Chinese economy. The resort
to the stimulus was in itself not surprising. Ramping up domestic
spending in order to neutralise the effects of a global slowdown
on an economy that was an export powerhouse made sense. It also
served the rest of the world well by keeping Chinese growth going
at close to 9 per cent.
There were, however, two features unusual about the Chinese stimulus.
To start with the stimulus package was not designed to rely largely
on an increase in direct government spending financed with its own
receipts. Rather, the increase in spending was to be financed by
the banks that were encouraged to offer huge volumes of debt to
finance spending by government-sponsored, but off-balance sheet,
entities. Second, in a reflection of the decentralisation of decision-making
and implementation, a substantial part of the additional spending
was undertaken at the provincial level by entities associated with
provincial governments.
One problem was that provincial governments in China have not been
permitted to issue bonds to borrow money to finance expenditures.
In a drastic 1994 response to evidence that provincial governments
had in a borrowing spree accumulated debts they were finding difficult
to service, the central government imposed a ban on local governments
running budget deficits and issuing bonds. Hence, when called upon
to spend as part of the stimulus effort, and happy to do so to launch
big, ''prestige projects'' backed by provincial leaders, they adopted
innovative schemes. Principally, these involved the creation of
financial vehicles-like the Urban Development Investment Corporations-superficially
separated from the provincial government, which were made to borrow
from the banks to finance these projects.
The problem now is the inability of such institutions, under the
aegis of which these projects were being implemented, to meet their
loan commitments. Many of the projects were financed with non-recourse
loans backed by collateral of uncertain or little commercial value
that could not be easily cashed in case of default. The future cash
flows associated with others such as toll-based roads, bridges and
subways are difficult to estimate. And some are social sector projects
with an implicit guarantee of a provincial investment holding corporation,
but no explicit commitment to pay.
Though the stimulus shored up China's remarkable growth rate even
in the midst of the crisis, doubts were soon being expressed about
the way it was financed. According to an audit conducted in the
middle of last year, in the aftermath of stimulus spending, local
government-associated debt had risen to $1.65 trillion or around
27 per cent of Chinese GDP. In comparison, central debt was estimated
at around 20 per cent of GDP. The audit showed that outstanding
local government debt rose by 62 per cent in 2009 alone, when Rmb
9600 billion was pumped into the system as part of the stimulus.
The inability of provincial governments to meet their implicit commitments
seems to be dawning on the centre with about a third of the loans
set to mature by the end of this year and around a half falling
due over the coming three years. Sensing repayment problems, the
government has reportedly initiated a huge programme to rollover
debts owed to the banks by these borrowers. The argument seems to
be that in time, these projects would on completion yield adequate
revenues, so that an extension of maturity is the way to go.
With the economy still strong and the government in command, there
is little fear that the problem would lead to a crisis of the kind
that the over-indebtedness of households and the high debt to GDP
ratios of governments in the West has precipitated. The centre would
in all probability recapitalize these banks as and when required
to keep them solvent. Even early critics of the policy of restructuring
debt by extending maturities, like the China Banking Regulatory
Commission, now admit that there is no immediate option.
But the wisdom of concealing a proactive fiscal policy, by making
state-owned banks lend to state-sponsored financing vehicles, which
in turn lend to state-backed projects is now in question. The problem
is that though these are infrastructure projects with an uncertain
future revenue stream, those revenues have to meet the acquired
interest and amortization commitments. That is at the moment clearly
not feasible, necessitating the restructuring. If the governments
had directly financed the projects, they could, in case of a revenue
shortfall, use other receipts they are eligible to receive or new
revenue sources to cover the difference.
Thus, the experience seems to signal the need for a change in the
policy of financing the large investment undertaken directly or
indirectly by the state in China. Over the last year, governments
in a few provinces and cities starting with Shanghai have been given
permission to issue bonds for the first time after close to two
decades. The Shanghai issue was hugely successful reflecting the
hunger for government bonds. But that once again raises the possibility
that provincial government in pursuit of the special interests of
their leaders would resort to excessive borrowing inadequately backed
with revenue generation. The problem is that, though constrained
by the ban on borrowing imposed by the central government, most
provincial governments in China rely on transfers from the centre
and the sale of lands they control or commandeer to finance their
expenditures. They are yet to establish any degree of financial
independence based on taxation despite the increase in incomes and
inequality in the system.
There is cause for concern elsewhere as well. Encouraged by easy
liquidity, the credit-financed spending boom has affected other
sectors. Chinese financial institutions have overextended themselves
in the property market in particular. The exposure of Chinese banks
to the property market is placed at more than a fifth of their advances.
Since the escalated lending has resulted in a spiral in housing
and real estate prices, fears of a speculative bubble that can go
bust have increased. This would impact on bank balance sheets and
solvency.
This problem has been exacerbated by structural changes induced
by liberalisation. Besides the state banks, especially the top four,
that dominated the financial system as a whole in China, the Chinese
financial structure now includes a host of private banks and a significant
shadow banking system consisting of trusts and other investment
companies. In the initial flush of the transition that saw banks
becoming important lenders, the big state controlled banks lent
to state owned enterprises and the private banks lent locally especially
to the small and medium enterprises that have been an essential
part of China's success story.
But recent developments appear to have taken the system in three
directions. First, as noted above the state-owned banks have hugely
increased their exposure to projects launched by provincial government-sponsored
entities that have yet to show adequate returns. Second, the private
banks and trust funds have moved on from financing small and medium
enterprises to financing and fuelling a real estate bubble. And
finally, through their engagement with the shadow banking system,
the larger commercial banks too are exposed indirectly to the property
market bubble.
These are all the result of the government choosing to use the banking
system as a development instrumentality, even while relaxing controls
on and supervision of financial firms as part of a ''Chinese way''
of restructuring the financial sector. In the event, while growth
promoted by the huge stimulus was a beneficial outcome, there are
a host of new problems surfacing. This would possibly encourage
the government to retrace its steps and strike a new path. Unless
membership of the WTO and the conditions that the government accepted
at the time of entry prove to be obstacles.
*
This article was originally published in the Frontline, Volume 29:
Issue 04, Feb. 25-Mar. 09, 2012.