Global Times

Indebted city still needs to aid failing government companies: Baotou mayor

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The mayor of one of China’s most high-profile debt-strapped cities said it will have to lend sistance to fragile local governs, ment enterprise­s even as he tries to bring the city’s finances under Baotou, a city of almost 3 milhina’s lion in North China Inner Monous Region, shot to prominence as an example of a local government that became overextend­ed in pursuit of rapid economic growth. In August, it canceled a 32 billion yuan ($5 bilroject, lion) subway project, saying its finances could not support the plan.

The city later admitted it had over-reported government revenue.

“Based on our current fiscal revenues, the burden was too heavy,” Mayor Zhao Jiangtao said in an interview with Reuters on Friday on the sidelines of China’s two sessions in Beijing. He added that Baotou’s debt was already too high at more than 100 percent of GDP.

While the central government has stressed local authoritie­s cannot serve as a backstop for borrowing by government enterprise­s, Zhao said it would be impossible for the city government to not step in to help local government companies facing default.

The city government should take over the cost of providing social services such as running schools, he added.

“This would be a huge help to (local government enterprise­s),” he said.

Zhao added he was in the process of verifying the level of “hidden” debt in Baotou, including debt of local government financing vehicles.

Corporate and financial institutio­ns’ heavy reliance on government interventi­on – a legacy of China’s planned economy system – will take years to overcome, he said.

Zhao added, however, that despite a more conservati­ve fiscal policy, Baotou’s efforts to upgrade its industrial base and bring in more investors from the private sector made him optimistic the city could meet its goal of 7 percent economic growth this year.

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