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China’s $2.3 Trillion Hidden Debt Is Seen Climbing Even Further

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China’s $2.3 Trillion Hidden Debt Is Seen Climbing Even Further

China’s local governments had 14.8 trillion yuan ($2.3 trillion) of hidden debt last year, and the figure could climb even further this year, according to a government-linked think tank.

Local governments were under pressure to increase infrastructure investment and shore up growth through the pandemic, leading to a 6% rise in off-budget borrowing from a recent low of 13.9 billion yuan in the third quarter of 2019, according to Liu Lei, a senior researcher at the National Institution for Finance and Development.

The hidden debt is comprised of funds raised by government-related entities for infrastructure and other public projects that carry an implicit official guarantee of repayment. Bonds sold by local government financing vehicles, or LGFVs, are one way provincial authorities raise money to increase spending without including it on their official balance sheets.

China has vowed to stabilize its macro leverage ratio and lower the government debt ratio this year to rein in risks. That could be hard to achieve as on-budget spending can’t cover the investment needed to drive the economy’s targeted growth by 2035, said Liu, whose organization is under the influential state-run Chinese Academy of Social Sciences and advises the government.

“Local governments will find ways to increase hidden debt because they are under pressure to expand investment,” Liu said in an interview. “In the longer term, the economy still faces lots of headwinds, including an uncertain external environment and an aging population.”

Technically Illegal
China doesn’t have an official account of local governments’ hidden debt, as it’s technically against the law. Estimates by different institutions could vary significantly. One estimate by S&P Global Ratings in 2019 put the size at 20 trillion yuan, while another that same year from Rhodium Group put it at 41.2 trillion to 51.7 trillion yuan.

Liu’s calculation includes bonds issued by LGFVs and borrowing by government-linked trust funds, insurers and other investment firms. It doesn’t take into account bank loans to LGFVs, which may be used on commercial projects instead of public welfare projects.

Local government will have to repay a record high 2.14 trillion yuan worth of LGFV bonds maturing this year, Bloomberg calculations show.

The hidden debt could have led to more than 700 billion yuan a year in extra interest payments, as such borrowing is more costly to service than government bonds, he said. It also creates risks to the stability of China’s financial system, as all kinds of financial institutions -- including banks, brokerages and trust funds -- have bought the debt, Liu added.

Last year’s increase came after debt declined from a peak of 16.6 trillion yuan in 2016, as authorities transformed some of the borrowing into government bonds and moved them onto official balance sheets.

 
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Sorry, I can't hear you over the Fed's brrring money printers.
The difference is that China right now is not in possession of critical technologies, the US dollar will reign supreme for some time yet, despite all the chest thumping about the imminent collapse of the greenback.

I often wonder if China is even really a threat, their rise has been entirely facilitated by Western capitalists.
 
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The difference is that China right now is not in possession of critical technologies, the US dollar will reign supreme for some time yet, despite all the chest thumping about the imminent collapse of the greenback.

I often wonder if China is even really a threat, their rise has been entirely facilitated by Western capitalists.
You need to look at things in their historical context. If we use the analogy of race runners, the US was once so far ahead that its competitors were behind the horizon. Then one competitor appeared on the horizon and got closer and closer until he's now just metres behind. Yes, the US is still #1, but its situation is not what it once was.
 
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The difference is that China right now is not in possession of critical technologies, the US dollar will reign supreme for some time yet, despite all the chest thumping about the imminent collapse of the greenback.

I often wonder if China is even really a threat, their rise has been entirely facilitated by Western capitalists.
Let's say this way, U.S still leading on the race but China has more momentum and catching up in a unimaginable speed.
 
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The difference is that China right now is not in possession of critical technologies, the US dollar will reign supreme for some time yet, despite all the chest thumping about the imminent collapse of the greenback.

I often wonder if China is even really a threat, their rise has been entirely facilitated by Western capitalists.


According to a recent Japanese government study, in terms of SCI-indexed research paper (The statistcs has not considered the fact about 30% of so papers from Europe/US are written by Chinese first-authors):

The first column, from left to right are: Japan, US, Germany, France, Britain, China, South Korea and the whole world

Total SCI papers published:
main-qimg-cfe81ae48cc46e9afea248bfec2920c9.png



And the Top 1% papers (by citation):
main-qimg-7ab69579682d466e694dc68c5e2e616e.png
 
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According to a recent Japanese government study, in terms of SCI-indexed research paper (The statistcs has not considered the fact about 30% of so papers from Europe/US are written by Chinese first-authors):

The first column, from left to right are: Japan, US, Germany, France, Britain, China, South Korea and the whole world

Total SCI papers published:
View attachment 727688


And the Top 1% papers (by citation):
View attachment 727687
Don't get too excited by academic papers and their citations. They are only useful for getting tenures, not a deciding factor in technological prowess.
 
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Nothing compared to US debt and China could always dump some treasury bonds to reduce their own debt.
 
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You know how it works American fake quotes and fake news. Unless American state propaganda directly links or names reproduceable source for anything or anyone in "China said" or "China did", it never happend and into the trash it goes.
 
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China doesn't have any debt the way America thinks of Debt that is. China could pay off its debt x100 tomorrow if it wanted to but its good for the economy to have some debt but not crippling debt.
 
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China should pay as much as possible for CPEC

Pakistan should take as much as possible from China, get our country built then we see them
 
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