China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

Up to 40% of China’s $1.7 trillion LGFV loans are at high risk of default. What’s a panicking Beijing to do?

The truth about Asian investment banking

May 2008

The rise of state-owned banks


The crisis suggests that privately owned banks are not self-evidently better managed nor more effective at allocating capital than state-owned ones.


The banking and capital markets of the world’s developed economies are the ultimate expression of free market capitalism: wasteful, inefficient, prone to ludicrous excess in providing capital at the wrong price to the wrong users and then to periodic panic and failure. Time and again, the free market shows itself to be the worst system of capital allocation... with the possible exception of all the others.

The most recent market failure has once again sent the champions of free markets pleading for state bailouts, which politicians, fearful of a voter backlash, have happily used voters’ own money to provide. Nationalization of a failed bank in the UK and provision of state financing for its wobbling peers, US public funds used to guarantee the liabilities of a failing investment bank: these are supposed to be temporary solutions. In fact, they reveal just how closely the hand of the state...


You must be a trialist or subscriber to view this content

Please Subscribe or take a Free Trial below.
Already a subscriber? Log in here.





Download the Free Euromoney iPad app today