Local governments must invest prudently
Updated: 2013-10-25 22:47
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||
The government should foster growth points and quit its reliance on investment-boosted economic growth, said an article in the 21st Century Business Herald (excerpts below).
The Sichuan provincial government recently disclosed its investment plan of 4.26 trillion yuan ($676 billion) from 2013 to 2014. The amount is 1.79 times Sichuan’s GDP.
Some investments by local governments have been spent on projects with low returns.
Once government investment declines, large amounts of non-performing assets will appear.
It is hard for local governments to sustain such a low-efficient large-scale investment plan. The interest rate will swallow a considerable part of their revenue.
Huge investments also aggravate inflation pressure. The vicious cycle means credible cash-thirsty projects cannot get enough financial support, while those with excess production capacities absorb too much capital.
Too often, local governments treat land as a debt financing lever. This means land transfers have actually become a non-regular tax distribution form.
Local borrowers have the audacity to maximize profits from land and invest the money in large-scale projects, regardless of their feasibility. As an investment method, it fall short of what the economy needs.
- Giant duck to exit after drawing the crowds
- Miss Universe 2013 to be held in Moscow
- Ministry to begin inspecting most heavily polluted regions
- Spy claims stir rebuke to Obama
- Paint the world a picture
- World's first 1-liter car debuts in Beijing
- Latin American clown convention
- Prince George baptized in London
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
The 11-square-mile experiment |
Private banks to start on trial basis |
Easing up on English |
Riding the wave of big bargain buy-ups |
Investing a nation's wealth wisely |
Fundamental challenges still remain |
Today's Top News
US, China broadband companies join forces
Chinatown restaurants learn how to get an 'A'
Snuff bottle 'gems' on display at Met
Beijing airport set to become world's busiest
US firms urge easier process for investment
EU to hold talks with US over spying
Wal-Mart plans to open 110 new stores
China calls for strengthened EU ties
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |