HOME    NEWS    SPECIAL REPORT    PHOTO    DATING    HOTEL
NEWS > Business
Local government debts detrimental to state treasury
2005-03-12 01:24:35 Xinhua English

BEIJING, March 12 (Xinhuanet) -- A National People's Congress (NPC)deputy from China's audit circles said local governments in many places are heavily in debt and the total amount of their debts farexceeds their repayment capabilities to the menace of the country's fiscal system.

Figures from the Ministry of Finance show that debts owed by local governments at all levels amount to 400 billion yuan (some 48 billion US dollars), about 15 percent of the country's aggregate fiscal revenues in 2004.

"The real figure could be even bigger," said Xie Liqun, director of the Zhejiang Provincial Audit Department in an interview with Xinhua on the sidelines of the NPC's annual session.

Chinese laws provide that local governments are not entitled toborrowing money from banks, but many of them turn to the investment firms they set up to obtain bank loans for their infrastructure development, he acknowledged.

If local governments' debts go on snowballing, they will sabotage the country's treasury, he said, adding that bloated debts, unless being serviced or written off, will be turned into large amounts of bad debts at banks, an already big headache for the vital banking system.

The central government should map out rules and regulations to oversee local government debts, he noted.

Of course, government at local levels should first bear in mindhow much they have borrowed from banks, since their subordinate departments are all borrowing money and the accumulated figures are hardly available, Xie acknowledged.

China's fiscal revenues rose by 21.4 percent year on year to 2.6 trillion yuan (some 314 billion dollars) on the back of robust economic growth, official figures show.

MORE NEWS
China's first private airline prepares for first flight  
Private airline maiden flight jolting state-own monopoly  
Cheap deals signal new mobile price war  
"Hot money" inflow warned  
State banks urged to use gov't input in reforms  
UBS obtains nod for financial derivatives  
EBay starts classifieds websites  
UAE, US to sign free trade agreement by year-end  

SINA English is the English-language destination for news and information about China. Find general information on life, culture and travel in China through our news and special reports£¬or find business partners through our online Business Directory. For investment opportunities with SINA, please click the link "Investor" below.
| About SINA | Investor | Media Kit | Comments or Question? |
Copyright© 2004 SINA.com. All Rights Reserved