South China Morning Post

PROVINCES HURTING FROM LOCAL BORROWING

Only Shaanxi posted a decline in debt ratio as of June last year as authoritie­s continue to rely on bond issues to finance spending programmes

- He Huifeng huifeng.he@scmp.com

The debt problems for all but one Chinese province are worsening as local authoritie­s continue to rely on borrowings to finance bigticket spending programmes, according to a joint review of local government finances.

The review revealed that with the exception of the hinterland province of Shaanxi, debt ratio, measured as outstandin­g debt to local gross domestic product, rose in 30 of 31 mainland provinces as of the end of June last year.

The assessment was released in the “Local Government Bond Blue Book 2021”, jointly published by the National Debt Associatio­n of China, a society under the Ministry of Finance, and China Chengxin Internatio­nal Credit Rating, the country’s biggest credit rating firm.

In all, 23 of the provincial areas had a fiscal balance ratio – a measure of debt repayment ability – below 50 per cent. The ratio is calculated as the share of budget revenues to budget expenditur­e. The results mean that most provinces are relying on transfer payments from Beijing or new debt to maintain fiscal balance.

Regional and local government­s sold 5.7 trillion yuan (HK$6.9 trillion) worth of bonds in the first nine months last year, Moody’s Investors Service said in a recent report. That was nearly 36 per cent higher than the same period in 2019.

Their outstandin­g debt totalled 25.6 trillion yuan at the end of September and was expected to reach 26 trillion yuan by the end of last year, pushing their average debt burden close to 100 per cent of revenue, analysts led by

Shanghai-based Amanda Du wrote in the report.

More than 78 per cent of new debt issues were maturing in 10 years or longer, the Moody’s report showed.

As a result, the weighted-average maturity of notes sold by regional and local government­s bonds increased to 15 years, prompting Beijing to call for improvemen­ts in their debt structure.

Despite unpreceden­ted support by Beijing to help provinces shore up their economies from the coronaviru­s shock, only 26 posted gains in the first nine months last year.

Regional disparitie­s persisted, ranging from a contractio­n of 10.4 per cent to an increase of 6.3 per cent over this period, Moody’s said in the report.

While Guangdong, Jiangsu and Shandong, the country’s three richest provinces, had the most debt, the debt ratio was above 100 per cent and particular­ly risky in nine provinces: Guizhou, Inner Mongolia, Liaoning, Ningxia, Tianjin, Qinghai, Yunnan, Jilin and Hunan.

In the rust-belt province of Liaoning, for instance, 62 per cent of the bonds issued in the first half of last year were used to repay existing debts, the highest proportion in China.

The local government debt problem is widely regarded as one of the “grey rhino” risks for the Chinese economy and the officially recognised debt, such as borrowings amassed through bond issuance, are just part of the debt picture.

Chinese local authoritie­s have also incurred debt through local government financing vehicles – which appear as “corporate” borrowings on paper – as well as state enterprise­s under direct control and private-public partnershi­p projects.

The National People’s Congress, the top legislatur­e, has budgeted a local government debt limit of 33 trillion yuan by the end of this year.

China’s total outstandin­g local government debt was 26.2 trillion yuan as of the end of March, data from the Ministry of Finance showed.

According to the blue book, China’s new local government bond issuances will reach about 4.62 trillion yuan this year. The funds raised via local government bonds this year would be used for “new infrastruc­ture” constructi­on, new urbanisati­on and capital expansion for some projects via special bonds, it said.

Since 2015, local government bond issuances had surged, maintainin­g an annual growth rate of 50.4 per cent, it added.

 ?? ?? Funds raised via bonds will be used for “new infrastruc­ture”.
Funds raised via bonds will be used for “new infrastruc­ture”.

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