Sara Hsu
Sara Hsu

A critical report of the World Bank on China got quite some media attention. That storm only became heavier after the report was removed from its website. Financial analyst Sara Hsu explains in the Diplomat why the World Bank was wrong to start with.

Sara Hsu:

The points that the controversial section of the report made do have some merit: China’s financial sector is indeed in need of further reform, there is no doubt about that. As the recent severe stock market downturn and the real estate price dive before that have revealed, volatility and excess demand for financial investment present serious problems in the economy right now. The constrained banking system, dominated by the state sector, provides insufficient funds to borrowers and insufficient yield to depositors, failing to embrace market forces. Issues in the banking sector have presented problems in China for decades.

However, China’s financial sector has been able to overcome its debt and regulation problems precisely with strong government intervention. The presence of the government has implied that Beijing is willing to backstop certain debts and implement regulations or mandates as needed. To a great extent, the financial system would not be able to function this smoothly without government participation. While moving toward a market-based system with proper risk controls in place would greatly benefit China’s financial system, it cannot reasonably argued that China’s slow financial reform process will reverse decades of growth as the World Bank report had claimed.

Reforms in the financial sector will take some time to implement, since currently, China’s leadership has its hands full, and is perhaps attempting to pull off too many market interventions and reforms at once. The real economy is down, and the financial economy, in particular the stock market, is also on the decline. New sources of growth are not on the horizon, manufacturing and services growth have slowed, and jobs for new university graduates have been increasingly difficult to come by. When and whether China can pull off its extensive list of targeted reforms is increasingly uncertain.

China’s leadership has embraced declining growth figures as the “New Normal,” something that it had years ago predicted would occur. Although the downturn of the real economy and the sharp asset price declines cannot be viewed as intentional, they have been accepted and are being dealt with by the state bodies. Certainly it is true that China’s financial sector needs an overhaul, but it is not in jeopardy as some have implied. Rightly, the inflammatory text in the World Bank report was removed not only because it was emphatic, but also because it was problematically hyperbolic.

More in the Diplomat.

Sara Hsu is a speaker at the China Speakers Bureau. Do you need her at your meeting or conference? Do get in touch or fill in our speakers´request form.

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