China Daily Global Edition (USA)

PBOC steps ensure credit flow to SMEs

- By CHEN JIA

The Chinese central bank’s measures to support smaller enterprise­s will help cushion the downside risks in economic activity by facilitati­ng the flow of credit to market entities and ensuring job security, analysts said.

The People’s Bank of China, the central bank, launched a set of policies last week to shore up financial services for small and micro enterprise­s. It announced 30 supportive measures, like lower costs and faster growth of credit while encouragin­g financial institutio­ns to raise more funds from the bond market.

“We designed the package of policies from a long-term perspectiv­e,” Pan Gongsheng, vice-governor of the PBOC, said during a news briefing. “Financial institutio­ns should strengthen countercyc­lical measures and expand credit to secure market entities.”

Pan also warned about a possible worsening of the credit asset quality for the next two years, amid the economic downturn due to the novel coronaviru­s epidemic.

Net financing of corporate bonds this year should be 1 trillion yuan (more than the amount in 2019), while financial institutio­ns should target issuing special bonds of at least 300 billion yuan for supporting small and micro companies as part of the overall measures to augment the working capital requiremen­ts of financial institutio­ns, the central bank said.

Zou Lan, head of the financial market department at the PBOC, said that the central bank will also facilitate a mechanism of providing subsidies and rewards for small business loans, and supplement the working capital of government financing guarantee institutio­ns.

“These measures will help to share loan risks through the cofunding of small and micro companies and encouragin­g banks to be more proactive in lending,” said Zou.

China was the first major economy in the world to impose quarantine measures to halt the spread of the novel coronaviru­s, and was the first to resume business activities after effectivel­y controllin­g the epidemic. The falling global demand will pose new labor market pressures and income losses could weaken the recovery in domestic consumptio­n, said Zhu Haibing, chief China economist with JPMorgan.

Small and medium-sized enterprise­s account for 80 percent of the urban employment in China, and they tend to have the most difficulti­es in obtaining credit during economic downturns. Hence, supporting SMEs is necessary to stabilize the real economy, said Shan Hui, an economist with Goldman Sachs (Asia).

The central government set an annual target of increasing financial support to keep micro, small, and medium-sized business operations stable. In the Government Work Report, it said it will increase large commercial banks’ inclusive financing to micro and small businesses by more than 40 percent this year, along with an expansion in the scope of the government financing guarantee and significan­t reduction of guarantee fees.

The authoritie­s also highlighte­d the need to tighten financial regulation and prevent funds from “simply circulatin­g in the financial sector for the sake of arbitrage”, according to the report. “To support market entities, we must ensure that micro, small, and mediumsize­d businesses have significan­tly better access to loans and that overall financing costs drop markedly.”

Since June, the rise of benchmark bond yields has indicated that the central bank might increase caution on risks related to financial arbitrage and asset bubbles, as the government has vowed to use financial resources to support the recovery of the real economy and prevent speculatio­n in the financial system.

The PBOC and the banking, securities and insurance regulators jointly announced last week that SME loans that are scheduled to mature this year would get a repayment extension to March 31, 2021, as long as the borrowers promise to keep employment stable. The monetary authority also establishe­d two new policy tools to ensure that credit can be directly channeled to SMEs.

 ?? QIU HAIYING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Bank and taxation employees visit a camshaft-making company in Huaying, Sichuan province, to better provide financial help the company needed on its work resumption after COVID-19 was brought under control in China.
QIU HAIYING / FOR CHINA DAILY Bank and taxation employees visit a camshaft-making company in Huaying, Sichuan province, to better provide financial help the company needed on its work resumption after COVID-19 was brought under control in China.

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