Global Times

Local govts to curb hidden debt

▶ Nation’s LGVF’s are taking blame for borrowing

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Off-balance-sheet borrowings by Chinese local government­s could be as high as 40 trillion yuan ($5.78 trillion) and amount to “a debt iceberg with titanic credit risks”, S&P Global Ratings said in a report on Tuesday.

When including so-called “hidden” local government debt, the ratio of government debt to gross domestic product (GDP) could have reached an “alarming” level of 60 percent in 2017, according to S&P Global.

China has said it would take steps to measure, assess and curb local government debt. Such off-balance-sheet borrowing is done outside the annual debt quota approved by the central government and via non-bond channels.

As of the end of last year, China’s outstandin­g government debt on-balance-sheets amounted to 29.95 trillion yuan, of which local authoritie­s have raised 16.5 trillion yuan through bond issuances since 2015.

S&P Global said local government­s’ off-balance-sheet borrowings might be as high as 30 to 40 trillion yuan. “That’s a debt iceberg with titanic credit risks,” it said.

Local government financing vehicles (LGFVs) have accumulate­d much of such hidden debt, and while firm plans are needed to reduce these debts, progress has been limited so far, S&P Global said.

LGFVs are entities created by local government­s to skirt borrowing limits set by Beijing.

Concerns about debt levels in China, particular­ly local borrowing, are on the rise as the economy cools amid deepening trade frictions with the US.

Beijing has once again turned to stimulus spending and easier credit, announcing a series of billion-dollar infrastruc­ture projects in recent months and lowering cash reserves that commercial banks need to set aside as buffers.

China has vowed to keep debt levels under control and persist with its multi-year financial de-risking campaign, even as it rolls out economic stimulus measures.

But global ratings agencies have been quick to downgrade issuers linked to Chinese regional and local government­s.

Last month, S&P Global cut by one notch the long-term issuer credit ratings of seven LGFVs from Southwest China’s Chongqing and North China’s Tianjin municipali­ties, and East China’s Jiangsu Province and Central China’s Hunan Province, which had issued bonds offshore.

In the same month, Moody’s Investors Service downgraded five nonfinanci­al corporate and infrastruc­ture issuers owned by government­s in Tianjin, Jiangsu, Hunan and Central China’s Hubei.

Local government­s have been forbidden by Beijing to bail out troubled LGFVs. “We believe China’s recent measures to stabilize growth and boost liquidity in response to internal and external headwinds aren’t necessaril­y a relaxation of its de-risking efforts,” S&P Global said in its report.

“Defusing financial risks, including the hidden local government debt, is one of three overarchin­g priorities of the country’s top leadership,” S&P Global said.

China is likely to spend a decade or more to address its hidden local government debt, S&P Global said.

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