Chinese local government debt reaches ‘boiling point’

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The local government of China has amassed debt of about 18.4 trillion Yuan (2.74 trillion dollars) by the end of 2018. The finance of local government is in shambles and it does not have enough money to repay the debt. To repay the maturing debt and fund the construction project, the local government is taking new loans. The Finance ministry of China estimates the debt of the local government to be around 2.74 trillion dollars or 20 percent GDP. The Chinese central government has allowed the local authorities to issue bonds to contain the debt. The analysts have red flagged the debt pile up of local government. The local government debt is at a “boiling point”, said Renmin University vice-president professor Wu Xiaoqiu.

The government estimates the debt at about 20 percent of GDP. However, according to analysts, the debt is much higher somewhere near 92 percent of GDP. The majority of local government debt is with state firms and local government financing vehicles (LGFVs). The effective government debt of China, which includes governments, state firms and LGFVs is around 140 percent. “A state-led mode was once an important tool contributing to China’s economic take-off, but it is now the systematic reason for rising leverage and risk accumulation,” said Zhang Xiaojing, a deputy director of the Institute of Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The state run China development bank comes to rescue when any local government is on verge of default. Sometimes, the state run companies deny the payments to private companies.  The country has 31 provincial governments, 334 municipal governments, about 3,000 county governments and around 40,000 township governments and almost all of them have debt pile up on their balance sheet.

The debt pile up is not limited to the local government, the private and public sector companies are moving towards a record-high corporate bond default. Given the record high bond defaults, analysts downgraded or issued sell ratings to 84 mainland listed companies. Previously in the second week of last month 345 billion dollars were wiped out of Chinese markets just by a single sell rating on one stock. The Shanghai composite index lost 4.4 percent of its valuation in a single day due to a rating downgrade. As per an analysis by Bloomberg, this is the highest down gradation in the month of March since 2011.

The investors are no longer optimistic about the Chinese growth story. The country has posted quarterly growth of 6.5 percent in the September quarter. This is the lowest quarterly growth in the decade and China has never been in such a bad condition since the global economic slowdown of 2008-09.The Chinese economy is on a downward trajectory but still, the official government data projects 6-7 percent GDP growth. There are few takers of Chinese growth story now, the economists and analysts across the world questioned official growth figures released by the Chinese government. The slowdown in real estate which contributes to more than 25 percent in the GDP is the real reason that there are no takers of Chinese official data.

Global investors are pulling money out of China to invest in US government bonds and in the markets of other economies like India and Indonesia because they expect better returns from there. The economy of India is driven by domestic consumption rather than exports, so it is bound to grow even in the midst of a global trade war. But the Chinese economy is facing a double whammy as domestic consumption is slowing down and exports are poised to take a hit due to the trade war. The control freak communist regime needs to make some outstanding efforts to redeem the China’s economy. 

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