logo
China's campaign to ease local government debt scores first big win in Inner Mongolia

China's campaign to ease local government debt scores first big win in Inner Mongolia

China's
debt relief campaign for local governments, launched last year, has delivered its first major success story after Inner Mongolia exited the central government's high-risk list.
Advertisement
The autonomous region was among 12 province-level jurisdictions flagged by Beijing for risky debt levels, with its exit revealed in a local budget review discussed internally in late July but only released to the public earlier this week.
'[We must] consolidate the progress made in exiting the list of key high-debt regions and guide local authorities to continue debt resolution efforts based on local conditions,' according to a statement released by the finance and economic committee of the northern region's People's Congress.
Inner Mongolia, the country's top coal miner and a major supplier of renewable energy and dairy products, had previously been forced to shelve a subway project in Baotou – the region's second-largest city – because of financial risks.
Local government debt, which accumulated after the
2008 global financial crisis , is widely seen as a ticking time bomb. It reached 51.95 trillion yuan (US$7.23 trillion) by the end of June, government data showed, driven by years of aggressive borrowing, especially through local government financing vehicles.
Advertisement
The model has become increasingly unsustainable, particularly as fiscal revenue from land sales has declined.
In September 2023, the State Council issued a directive targeting 12 high-risk province-level areas and called for debt control and restructuring over the following two years, along with support measures.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Alibaba's world-leading AI lab becomes a target for talent poaching by Chinese rivals
Alibaba's world-leading AI lab becomes a target for talent poaching by Chinese rivals

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

Alibaba's world-leading AI lab becomes a target for talent poaching by Chinese rivals

Top artificial intelligence talent at Alibaba Group Holding 's Tongyi Lab, developer of the widely used open-source Qwen models, has become highly sought after, with a number of leading experts leaving to join rival tech giants amid a heated recruitment race. Recent departures include Yan Zhijie and Bo Liefeng, two senior figures at Tongyi. Yan, who joined Alibaba in 2015, was an early member of the company's cutting-edge Damo Academy and later led Tongyi's speech lab. He left Alibaba in February and recently joined 's Explore Academy, a research division founded in 2020 to focus on frontier technology, Chinese media reported. did not directly comment on Yan's recruitment, but said on Monday that 'Explore Academy is proceeding as planned, actively recruiting top AI talent from across the industry, including technical experts and members of our Tech Genius Team'. Following his departure from Alibaba, Yan briefly joined Tencent Holdings , but left soon after an internal restructuring, according to Chinese media reports. Li Xiangang, co-founder of start-up took his place In June. Tencent's booth at World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai in July. Photo: Wency Chen Separately, Bo, who headed Tongyi's applied vision division after previous roles at and recently transitioned to Tencent's Hunyuan AI model team, Chinese media reported.

From watermelon balls and rubber ducks to action figures: when Hong Kong was ‘Toy Town'
From watermelon balls and rubber ducks to action figures: when Hong Kong was ‘Toy Town'

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

From watermelon balls and rubber ducks to action figures: when Hong Kong was ‘Toy Town'

From aeroplane chess to Chinese checkers and action figures, Hong Kong toy enthusiasts still keep locally made toys in their vaults. They are reminders of the glory days of Hong Kong's position as the world's largest toy manufacturer. The 'Made in Hong Kong' label seen at the back of most toys produced in the 1970s became an important symbol of the city's identity as a global manufacturer. The opening up of China and the northward transfer of manufacturing to factories on the mainland spelled an end to this period. But toy production has not completely left Hong Kong, which continues to be an important base for the industry.

What are rare earths, and why is China's dominance facing global pushback
What are rare earths, and why is China's dominance facing global pushback

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

What are rare earths, and why is China's dominance facing global pushback

Read more about rare earths: Rare earth elements are the cornerstone of producing electronics and technological applications, from defence equipment to automobiles. China dominates the global supply of rare earths, controlling more than 90 per cent of all processing. Amid widening trade wars and growing economic instability, companies have sought to diversify their supply chains to lower their reliance on Chinese supplies. But industry analysts suggest that from funding to production, such change could take upwards of 20 years because of major challenges including time, cost and human capital.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store