Reform efforts will ease financial pressures, support project funding
A worker welds a steel frame for a bridge under construction in Linzhou, Henan province. The National Development and Reform Commission is expected to work out an annual target list to implement reform initiatives mapped out at a key leadership meeting earlier this month. Bi Xingshi / For China Daily |
Although the world has been talking about China's local government debt piling up, how bad is it really?
It is "under control", said a senior economic policy official on Wednesday in Beijing.
Yang Weimin, an official with the Leading Group on Finance and Economics of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, said the amount of local debt is risky but remains manageable.
The debt raised by local governments to finance their own development projects has grown quickly, he said.
But if measures pledged in the reform roadmap adopted by the Third Plenum of the 18th CPC Central Committee are followed, local debt won't be a major problem, Yang said.
In fact, the reform efforts will ease local government debt burdens, Yang said.
The details are still being worked out by officials, he said, but will be unveiled nationwide in due course. The National Development and Reform Commission will come up with an annual target list to carry out the reform initiatives, Yang said.
The National Audit Office last reported local government debt at the end of 2010, giving the figure as 10.72 trillion yuan ($1.77 trillion).
Economists' estimates of current local debt range from 20 trillion yuan to 30 trillion yuan, with the latter equivalent to 60 percent of the GDP.
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