China Daily

Taming a behemoth called fintech

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In a speech at the 2020 Bund Summit in Shanghai, which was held from Friday to Sunday, ViceMinist­er of Finance Zou Jiayi said the country supports the developmen­t of financial technology, but it should be guided by market rules to ensure it doesn’t lead to excessive consumptio­n, creating a “winnertake­s- all” situation.

Shang Fulin, director of the Economic Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference National Committee, said fintech is a technology- driven innovative financial activity and warned that the sector should not violate the basic rules of financial operation, else it risks being punished by the market.

The two officials’ attitude toward fintech reflects the authoritie­s’ vigilance after a series of problems and challenges brought about by fintech in the past years. Just last year, Zhou Xiaochuan, former governor of the central bank, stressed the need to guard against big technology enterprise­s’ “winner- takes- all” formula and their invasion into inclusive finance.

Fintech’s essence remains finance, with technology just being a tool to achieve desired results, so it must follow regulation­s. In fact, technology is there merely for financial innovation and cannot alter the sector’s traditiona­l purpose.

Fintech’s developmen­t in recent years has brought about positive changes including promoting inclusive finance. Yet it has also exposed potential risks and vulnerabil­ities. Therefore, while holding an open and inclusive attitude toward the sector, we should keep a sober mind on its developmen­t.

The authoritie­s need to pay attention to fintech’s potential in boosting the financial sector.

Ever since third- party payment tools were created on e- commerce platforms, enterprise­s have launched various consumer credit tools to stimulate consumptio­n. Some platforms use various methods to encourage young people to consume more. Then there are other platforms that launch almost no- threshold consumer credit tools to encourage people to increase consumptio­n.

These platforms thus cultivate a credit- dependent consumptio­n habit among young people, obtaining benefits from both consumptio­n and credit channels.

According to a Nielsen report released last year, 86.6 percent of China’s young people avail of consumer credit, and their average debt- to- income ratio is 41.75 percent. Some illegal loan sharks, too, have entered the sector, causing many social problems.

How to prevent big fintech enterprise­s from promoting the winnertake­s- all formula is a global problem. The rapid growth of such enterprise­s has increased the need for the authoritie­s to strengthen financial regulation while encouragin­g innovation.

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