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China has become one of the world s biggest growth engines. However, it is always critical to note that China has a financial system that is dominated by banking sector: one that is dominated by state-owned banks, and banks that heavily favor state-owned large corporations. Small and medium enterprises in China generally experience a lack of access to business capital. This is especially true in rural area, where households are business units in need of seasonal credit but with hardly any collateral. It is therefore interesting to investigate the lending situation in rural areas to see how…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
China has become one of the world s biggest growth
engines. However, it is always critical to note that
China has a financial system that is dominated by
banking sector: one that is dominated by state-owned
banks, and banks that heavily favor state-owned
large corporations. Small and medium enterprises in
China generally experience a lack of access to
business capital. This is especially true in rural
area, where households are business units in need of
seasonal credit but with hardly any collateral. It
is therefore interesting to investigate the lending
situation in rural areas to see how informal lending
fills in the gap between demand for credit and
supply of credit by government and banks. Using data
from household surveys, the author found that
poverty alleviation loans are not reaching the
poorest segments of the rural population.
Furthermore, private lending is the most important
source of credit in rural China, and factors such as
higher disposable income and level of education lead
to more borrowing at the household level.
Autorenporträt
Tong Li is a Senior Research Analyst at the Milken Institute. She
co-authored The Rise and Fall of the U.S. Mortgage and
Credit Markets: A Comprehensive Analysis of the Meltdown (John
Wiley & Sons, 2009). Tong received her Ph.D. in economics from
the University of California, Riverside, and a bachelor's degree
from Peking University.