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Easier financing demanded for smaller enterprises
in China
04/16/2004
Xinhua
The problems faced by small and medium-sized enterprises in borrowing
from banks and raising funds directly from the capital market is
a serious problem in China, which is undergoing an economic restructuring
and striving to expand small businesses and the non-State sector.
New policies are needed to support the growth of smaller enterprises
financially, according to a forum on the development of China's
financial market held in Tianjin, a port city in North China.
"It is imperative for the guiding principles and regulations
of China's financial regime to keep abreast of changes," said
Liu Hongru, former chairman of China Securities Regulatory Commission.
Liu said there had been two major changes in the Chinese economy
since 1997. One was the replacement of sustained inflationary by
deflationary pressure, the other a policy shift from mainly serving
large state-owned enterprises to supporting smaller and non-public
businesses.
However, the smaller enterprises had for long suffered from an
insufficient supply of financing, due, in large part, to their exposure
to high risks and their relatively low trustworthiness, cut-backs
by State-owned commercial banks in an effort to turn more market-oriented
and the under-development of China's money and capital markets,
Liu said.
With China's fast economic growth since the 1990s, smaller enterprises
contributed to 76 percent of the nation's total value-added industrial
output and provided 75 percent of jobs in urban areas nationwide,
according to data offered by the Small and Medium-sized Enterprise
Department of the former State Economic and Trade Commission.
Over the past few years, China's central bank has worked out a
series of policies and measures to support smaller enterprises,
started a trial operation of a credit guarantee system for them
and launched a start-up fund for scientific and technological smaller
businesses.
Meanwhile, stock market access has been given to eligible non-State
enterprises, and a law has been enforced since 2002 to promote the
growth of smaller enterprises.
But all these endeavors are yet to meet the mounting demand of
smaller enterprises for more efficient financial services.
"Under the current financial regime, smaller enterprises have
to mainly depend on commercial banks for financial support,"
said Liu Hongru.
To this end, Liu suggested that special credit institutions should
be established to provide services for smaller enterprises, together
with credit rating and credit extension systems in compliance with
the characteristics of such businesses, Liu said.
Special financial instruments should be developed to meet demand
of smaller enterprises for financing and settlement, he added.
Besides, a group of smaller financial institutions that are compatible
to smaller enterprises in terms of operation system and business
scale should be created. Such institutions may be invested jointly
by smaller and non-public enterprises, with the latter as their
major customers, according to experts at the forum.
A deposits insurance system will also be necessary to help enhance
the anti-risk ability of the smaller enterprises, the experts concluded.
Meanwhile, China's capital market should be improved to relieve
the demand for cash among smaller enterprises, for which a second-board
market, or a stock market for growth enterprises, was needed, according
Xia Bing, a senior researcher from the Development Research Center
under the State Council.
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