Finance, private business and the Wenzhou model

By Heiko Khoo
0 Comment(s)Print E-mail China.org.cn, April 9, 2012
Adjust font size:

The first domino [By JIao Haiyang/China.org.cn]

The first domino [By JIao Haiyang/China.org.cn]

The banking reforms proposed by Premier Wen Jiabao are designed to facilitate the flow of credit to small businesses, which have suffered from a contraction in China's export markets and rising wages and raw material costs. The tight rules on bank loans and the fact that state banks lend overwhelmingly to state owned enterprises often drive small business into the clutches of loan sharks, who charge extortionate interest rates in grey and black market financing.

Such banking reform could act as a powerful leverage to normalize the relationship between the state and the private sector, thus ensuring that the constitutional position that guarantees the dominance of the public sector is maintained. The normalization of the protocol for lending to small- and medium-sized businesses can transform many of China's speculative capitalists into more productive economic agents, thereby binding them more closely to the progressive state objectives contained in its 12th Five-Year Plan.

Don't miss:

? Loan reform in the shadows of banking fraud

??Take care to let in private capital

In 2011, financial crisis in Wenzhou hit headlines as dozens of business leaders fled the city to hide from creditors. The city has thousands of small-scale family firms that mostly produce consumer goods like textiles, shoes and lighters – labor intensive production with low entry costs. These manufacturing sectors played a vital role during the reform era, even though they also generated terrible breaches of labor rights and many products were of poor quality. Such labor rights abuses should be eliminated by coordinated and concerted efforts by the trade unions to raise wages and ensure that the labor laws are enforced. The control of product quality by government agencies has given rise to significant improvements over the last 10 years, but quality issues remain a common problem. Resolving these issues corresponds to state objectives, which aim to raise consumer demand and move China's production quality up the value chain.

China's banks have acted as an instrument to draw private cash into state coffers while limiting lending to the private sector. This helped to mobilize resources to meet targets for growth and development by channeling funds towards the large enterprises owned and controlled by the state, which retain dominance of the economy in line with the nation's constitution and its socialist objectives. The extraordinary success of China's economy during the biggest crisis of world capitalism since the 1930s is a testimony to the underlying validity of its structural balance of economic forces.

Freewheeling Wenzhou provides valuable lessons in the way to channel private interests to meet consumer needs. However, one cannot ignore the fact that Wenzhou's capitalists have played a particularly negative role by stoking up a speculative property boom all over China. This continues to cause the government a headache and perpetuate an unnecessarily severe housing shortage for urban workers. It is natural that workers, who see many millions of urban apartments left empty, resent the speculative activities of real estate capitalists.

In addition to the government's aim to construct 36 million low-cost apartments by 2015, measures should be taken to prevent private owners from leaving property empty. This could produce a rapid rise in rental availability and force properties onto the rental market, precipitating a much-needed fall in rents. Strong rent controls, contracts and tenants rights, such as they exist in many European countries, would normalize the sector. Lower rents and greater security of tenure will leave more money in the pockets of the urban workforce to spend on consumer goods for their homes.

Cities in the interior remain overwhelmingly dominated by state owned or state controlled enterprises, and these sectors are the primary engines driving catch-up development. The advantages of such publicly owned planning levers are most evident in the sphere of emulation and capital-intensive infrastructure investments.

According to the followers of Friedrich Hayek, the inability to meet consumer needs in a complex and sophisticated economy was the root cause of the collapse of the Soviet Union. In their minds, private sector innovation and flexibility inevitably conquers sclerotic state ownership and planning. China's reform era ownership combinations seem to disprove this idea. The non-state sectors of the market met consumer demands, which large-scale state ownership had failed to address, and China became a global manufacturing base for consumer goods, but it was state investment in large-scale industry and infrastructure that drove the overall pattern of development.

As early as 1921, the Soviet leader Vladimir Lenin proposed that the banking system should be used as a tool to integrate the small-scale producer into collective endeavour. He believed that the provision of credit to small-scale enterprises should be used as a means of materially motivating such firms to meet overall state objectives, and that by providing more favorable interest rates to the state and cooperative sector than to the private sector, social objectives could be prioritized.

Small- and medium-sized enterprises often complain about the high interest rates they are forced to pay along with other burdens on their profits. Credit flows to the private sector need to become more normalized and transparent. This can reduce corruption, undermine illegal financing, and stimulate small- and medium-sized private and cooperative firms while simultaneously bringing greater control over their activities.

Article 11 of the Chinese constitution explains that, "the State encourages, supports and guides the development of the non-public sectors of the economy and, in accordance with law, exercises supervision and control over the non-public sectors of the economy." Both of these components are required at the present time in order to ensure that the crisis in the private sector does not adversely affect overall development objectives, and that its capital and influence is channeled in a positive direction.

The author is a columnist with China.org.cn. For more information please visit:

http://www.ccgp-fushun.com/opinion/heikokhoo.htm

Opinion articles reflect the views of their authors, not necessarily those of China.org.cn

 

Print E-mail Bookmark and Share

Go to Forum >>0 Comment(s)

No comments.

Add your comments...

  • User Name Required
  • Your Comment
  • Racist, abusive and off-topic comments may be removed by the moderator.
Send your storiesGet more from China.org.cnMobileRSSNewsletter
主站蜘蛛池模板: 免费高清av一区二区三区| 欧美亚洲人成网站在线观看| 国产免费爽爽视频免费可以看| 中文字幕日韩三级片| 毛片色毛片18毛片美女| 国产成人精品免高潮在线观看 | 天天躁夜夜躁狠狠躁2021| 亚洲va中文字幕| 精品久久久久久国产潘金莲| 国产精品va无码二区| 99久久国产综合精品女图图等你 | 日韩国产中文字幕| 亚洲va久久久噜噜噜久久男同| 欧美色成人综合| 向日葵app看片视频| 色之综合天天综合色天天棕色| 日本三级高清电影全部| 亚洲熟妇色自偷自拍另类| 老阿姨哔哩哔哩b站肉片茄子芒果 老阿姨哔哩哔哩b站肉片茄子芒果 | 色综合久久天天综合| 国自产精品手机在线观看视频| yellow视频免费看| 日韩欧美一区二区三区| 人人妻人人澡人人爽欧美一区| 韩国无码av片| 国产精品美女久久久网站动漫 | 男人扒开女人下面狂躁动漫版 | 久久久久青草大香线综合精品| 欧美精品福利在线视频| 四虎在线永久精品高清| 荐片app官网下载ios怎么下载| 国产女人爽的流水毛片| 99久久人妻无码精品系列蜜桃| 女人与禽牲交少妇| 久久久久人妻一区精品色| 日韩黄色片在线观看| 亚洲欧美日韩国产| 特级毛片免费播放| 四虎永久免费影院| 色天使色婷婷丁香久久综合| 国产激情无码视频在线播放性色 |