The People’s Bank of China reports that the combined domestic debt of corporations, households and the public sector increased last year to a level equivalent to 280 % of GDP (285 trillion yuan or 36 trillion euros), up from 255 % of GDP in 2019. When China’s foreign debt (which the PBoC estimates to be 14.5 % of GDP at the end of June) is included, total debt rises to about 295 % of GDP.
Due to the covid crisis and related measures, the debt-to-GDP ratios of many countries increased significantly last year. Figures from the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) for over 40 countries suggest China’s the increase in debt-to-GDP ratio from the start of 2020 to end of June was quite ordinary compared to the other countries. China’s debt-to-GDP ratio, nevertheless, is distinctly higher than in other emerging economies and on par with US and euro area, which have more developed financial markets.
China’s piling on of debt has long raised concerns among observers of the Chinese economy because rapid descents into indebtedness in other countries have typically led to major economic collapse or severe banking crises. Moreover, China was already engaged in efforts to bail out small and medium-sized banks before covid-19 struck, with so at least 500 billion yuan (BOFIT Weekly 40/2020) in public funds already expended. The lion’s share of Chinese debt exists in the form of bank loans taken by the corporate sector. During the covid pandemic, certain branches experienced significant declines in the ability of firms to service their debts. Stress tests released by PBoC in November showed that 10 of 30 banks were would fail even under the mildest stress scenario, which only assumed that GDP growth would be 1.6 % in 2020 and 7.8 % in 2021. The stress tests comprised all of China’s systemically critical banks.
silly CCP want to change the workld order his own way with his evil Putin, end up global supply chain restructuring and technology banned. Silly CCP and his die hard supporter qqq.
Seymour Hersh is the guy who brought u the pentagon papers....and full details of the bombing of nordstream....with motives , names, and every thing a court needs to judge.
It is manifest destiny of China to be on the side of global south, of Africa, middle east, Latin America where 88% of the people lives and the regions of greatest growth
The Imperial west has not changed at all and still doubling down as imperialists.....China knows it remembers it and remember the century of humiliation.now they want to contain China, derail China, impoverished China, stop the growth of China......but the west will fail.
Ev is a good example.in next few years China ev will dominate the market....Germany and Japan eat what then?
Deflation very bad. Jobless very bad. Bad debt very bad. Only qqq all are very good because he can't write and understand his ancient language and culture. A person who lost his own identity. very pity
Xinjiang genocide, no evidence no logic, no motive never mind, its genocide. because China bad.
Biden bombs nordstream. detail account by Seymour hersh, got names, got details, got motives...but ignored by mainstream media because america good. Good cannot do bad things.
america that has been in continous wars as long as the republics.
I am not worry about China debt as they can always closed up and they are not transparent at all! But today, it's different! China no longer world's factory as most already shifted elsewhere! This create a deflationary situation for China! Deflation is far worse than recession! Things will unravel in years to come as China infra start to crumble due to lack of maintance, obviously because there's not much investment from foreign countries and demand for China cheap goods anymore!
Xi took the country wrong direction. With the deflation, jobless, debt default, incomplete housing projects he lost his crown as famous leader. The people very pity.
me? I worry what G7 eat? auto industry........China takes over the auto industry like China used to take over toys.........G7 eat what?
China is world infrastructure builder........... with China dominating in all the big ticket items, like ships, ports, rails, now cars, transport..G7 eat what? what is left for G7? I mean other than selling bombs and weapons?
then there is the issue of governance. China has the best governance in the world, a country of geniuses, well led, united, educated by now.......................................................................scare of what?
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
Posted by IDQWE001 > 2023-04-05 15:08 | Report Abuse
The People’s Bank of China reports that the combined domestic debt of corporations, households and the public sector increased last year to a level equivalent to 280 % of GDP (285 trillion yuan or 36 trillion euros), up from 255 % of GDP in 2019. When China’s foreign debt (which the PBoC estimates to be 14.5 % of GDP at the end of June) is included, total debt rises to about 295 % of GDP. Due to the covid crisis and related measures, the debt-to-GDP ratios of many countries increased significantly last year. Figures from the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) for over 40 countries suggest China’s the increase in debt-to-GDP ratio from the start of 2020 to end of June was quite ordinary compared to the other countries. China’s debt-to-GDP ratio, nevertheless, is distinctly higher than in other emerging economies and on par with US and euro area, which have more developed financial markets. China’s piling on of debt has long raised concerns among observers of the Chinese economy because rapid descents into indebtedness in other countries have typically led to major economic collapse or severe banking crises. Moreover, China was already engaged in efforts to bail out small and medium-sized banks before covid-19 struck, with so at least 500 billion yuan (BOFIT Weekly 40/2020) in public funds already expended. The lion’s share of Chinese debt exists in the form of bank loans taken by the corporate sector. During the covid pandemic, certain branches experienced significant declines in the ability of firms to service their debts. Stress tests released by PBoC in November showed that 10 of 30 banks were would fail even under the mildest stress scenario, which only assumed that GDP growth would be 1.6 % in 2020 and 7.8 % in 2021. The stress tests comprised all of China’s systemically critical banks.