Chinese leader appear optimistic about their ability to weather the current financial storms, and they are spreading the word. Still I’m skeptical that China is going to escape from this crisis unscathed. I’m thinking these days more about China’s banking sector than anything else.
Pretty well every major industrialized country has had to put up some money to bail out it banking sector. Chinese officials have certainly taken the time to point out who their banking sector did not fall victim to these subprime loans, and how this crisis is all the fault of irresponsible American lending. I can accept criticism of America’s banking sector. Clearly something…or a lot of things…went wrong. Still, I think criticism from China may have a substantial amount of pot and kettle syndrome attached to it. China’s banks were “immune” from the subprime loan fiasco because they are far more disconnected from global finance than are western banks, but they suffer from problems which do not affect western banks to the same degree. Chinese banks are often used as financing vehicles for Party or personal ends.
My question is despite having no subprime loans on their books, how many non performing loans exist? How many zombie firms are being created or sustained based on politically ordered banking support? Even without outside intervention, how many banks are simply rolling over loans in order to make their balance sheets appear more solid. Since the Party’s plan to make it through the downturn includes easing some lending restrictions on banks, how many more non performing loans will be generated by this “stimulus”?
To me it seems like instead of using this crisis as an opportunity to fix a problem, the Chinese government is scoring a few points on the international stage at the same time as digging themselves deeper into a hole. America will come out of the downturn refocused and reorganized. China will come out having squandered money on inefficient investments, and with an even bigger banking crisis to unwind in the future.
Monday, February 2, 2009
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