No Result
View All Result
Mobile
Subscription
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
Friday, May 1, 2026
中文
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper
No Result
View All Result
Sky Eco News
No Result
View All Result

China unveils $1.4 trln local debt package but no direct stimulus

China unveils $1.4 trln local debt package but no direct stimulus

FILE PHOTO: Sale signs adorn residential buildings under construction in Huizhou, Guangdong province, China October 10, 2024. Picture taken through a windshield. REUTERS/Nicoco Chan/File Photo

China unveiled a 10 trillion yuan ($1.40 trillion) debt package on Friday to ease local government financing strains and stabilise flagging economic growth, as it faces fresh pressure from the re-election of Donald Trump as U.S. president.

They aim to repair municipal balance sheets as a longer-term objective, rather than directly inject money into the economy.

Finance Minister Lan Foan said more stimulus was coming, with some analysts saying Beijing may not want to fire all its weapons before Trump takes over officially in January.

In an apparent reaction to the U.S. election and the intensifying risks to trade, state media CCTV reported that China’s cabinet on Friday approved expanding coverage of export credit insurance and will step up support for trade firms.

But for now, those investors who speculated on a fiscal bazooka may be disappointed.

“I don’t see anything that exceeds expectations,” said Huang Xuefeng, research director at Shanghai Anfang Private Fund Co, in Shanghai. “It’s not huge if you look at the fiscal shortfalls.”

“The money is used to replace hidden debts, which means it doesn’t create new work flows, so the support to growth is not that direct.”

Local governments, facing high debt and falling revenues, have been cutting civil servants’ pay and amassing debts with private sector companies, choking money flows to the real economy and fanning deflationary pressures.

Their strains, stemming from a severe property crisis since 2021 which decimated revenues from residential land auctions to developers – a key source of funds for cities and provinces – had put China’s 2024 growth target of roughly 5% at risk.

China’s longer-term outlook is further clouded by Trump’s threat of tariffs in excess of 60% on all Chinese goods, which has rattled Chinese manufacturers and accelerated factory relocation to Southeast Asia and other regions.

Exporters say the tariffs will further shrink profits, hurting jobs, investment and growth in the process. They would also exacerbate China’s industrial overcapacity and the deflationary pressures it fuels, analysts said.

The package, unveiled at the end of a week-long parliament meeting, included raising the local governments’ debt quota by 6 trillion yuan over the next three years, with the new funds to be used to repay “hidden debts”. It also gave municipalities the greenlight to use for the same purpose another 4 trillion over five years in issuance that Beijing had already approved.

Beijing uses “hidden debt” to describe the loans, bonds and shadow credits of local government financing vehicles, or LGFVs.

Lan said those debts stood at 14.3 trillion yuan at the end of 2023, which authorities planned to trim to 2.3 trillion yuan by 2028. The International Monetary Fund, however, estimates debts of LGVFs amounted to 60 trillion yuan at the end of 2023, or 47.6% of GDP.

Swapping hidden for official debt is expected to save 600 billion yuan in interest for local governments over five years.

Carlos Casanova, Asia senior economist at UBP, estimated China needed a debt package of 23 trillion yuan to reduce the inventory of unsold homes and repay maturing LGFV debt.

The measures announced on Friday “are going to disappoint the market because China needs more essentially,” he said.

MORE SUPPORT

Lan also reiterated officials will issue policies to support state sector purchases of unsold apartments and reclaim undeveloped residential land from property developers, as well as replenish the capital of big state banks.

He did not give details on the size or timing of those measures, which would represent a much more direct way of injecting fiscal oomph into the economy.

“The lack of direct fiscal stimulus suggests that policymakers would leave policy room for the impact of Trump 2.0 later,” said Xing Zhaopeng, senior China strategist at ANZ.

Also without detailing, Lan said Beijing will “intensify efforts” to support manufacturing equipment upgrades and expand a consumer subsidy scheme that targets purchases of appliances and other goods.

Many economists have long argued for stronger consumer stimulus, especially as Beijing faces increasingly higher tariffs on its exports from Washington and other capitals in Europe and elsewhere.

Low wages, high youth unemployment and a feeble social safety net leave China’s household spending below 40% of GDP, or about 20 percentage points behind the global average.

“I don’t think that we will see direct fiscal stimulus aimed at consumption anytime soon,” UBP’s Casanova said.

“I think you will need a lot more pain for that to materialize,” he said. “China is probably going to hold back some of that fire power until they have a better idea of what President Trump is planning.”

($1=7.1533 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Kevin Yao)

 

Post Related

ING launches 1 billion euro buyback as profit beats expectations

ING launches 1 billion euro buyback as profit beats expectations

ING Groep on Thursday launched a 1 billion euro ($1.2 billion) share buyback as it beat quarterly profit expectations, boosted...

BNP Paribas reports 9% rise in Q1 profit, investment bank stutters

BNP Paribas reports 9% rise in Q1 profit, investment bank stutters

BNP Paribas reported a forecast-beating 9% rise in first-quarter profit on Thursday thanks to its retail bank, even as its...

EU steelmakers set for rebound as Iran war hurts more exposed Asian peers

EU steelmakers set for rebound as Iran war hurts more exposed Asian peers

After over half a dozen muted earnings seasons, steelmakers in the European Union are set for a rebound and the...

German energy firm SEFE plans capital increase to start privatisation process

German energy firm SEFE plans capital increase to start privatisation process

German energy group SEFE, seized from Russia's Gazprom in 2022, has proposed a capital increase of up to $2.35 billion,...

Sibanye asks for EU concessions as it ramps up Europe’s first lithium mine

Sibanye asks for EU concessions as it ramps up Europe’s first lithium mine

South Africa's Sibanye Stillwater said on Monday it is seeking concessions from the European Union to shield Europe's first large-scale...

Ferragamo family appoints former Estee Lauder CEO Freda as strategic advisor

Ferragamo family appoints former Estee Lauder CEO Freda as strategic advisor

Salvatore Ferragamo's controlling shareholder said on Monday it had appointed former Estee Lauder chief executive Fabrizio Freda as special strategic...

Top news

  • ING launches 1 billion euro buyback as profit beats expectations
  • BNP Paribas reports 9% rise in Q1 profit, investment bank stutters
  • UK expels Russian diplomat in tit-for-tat response to Moscow’s espionage claim
  • Bank of England set to hold rates as Iran war clouds outlook
  • New York Mayor Mamdani encourages King Charles to return Koh-i-Noor Diamond
SKY ECO NEWS

© 2024 SEMG.

About Us

  • Chinese Emassy, London
  • Embassy of the United Kingdom
  • Xinhua
  • People’s Daily
  • China Daily
  • GlobalTimes
  • The Times
  • BBC

Message

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Britain
  • China
  • Business
  • World
  • Culture
  • Opinion
  • Newspaper

© 2024 SEMG.