A contrarian take on China’s enormous debt load – China’s latest business and technology news
A summary of the top news in Chinese business and technology for July 28, 2017. Part of the daily The China Project newsletter, a convenient package of China’s business, political, and cultural news delivered to your inbox for free. Subscribe here.

“Doomsayers have plenty to work with in China,” says Andrew Polk of Trivium/China, a Beijing-based research firm, speaking primarily of China’s phenomenal debt-to-GDP ratio, which has ballooned from 160 percent less than a decade ago to 260 percent today. It “seems almost guaranteed to herald a financial crash or at least a major correction, quite likely followed by years of stagnation,” he writes in Bloomberg View.
But Polk actually argues the opposite: Several signs show that China may be about to turn the corner on debt, or at least mitigate the worst effects of it. These signs are:
- A rapidly diminishing credit intensity ratio. Whereas in the first halves of the years 2012-2016, China took on average over four dollars in loans to create just one dollar of GDP growth, this year to date it has taken just 2.9. That’s almost a 30 percent reduction.
- A commodity boom — in steel, coal, oil, and gas — is helping some of China’s most indebted companies “to service their existing liabilities, which means they don’t have to take on as much new debt to pay off the old.”
- Finally, Polk calculates that 12 percent of China’s corporate debt has been renegotiated in a productive way since the middle of 2016, as a result of “China’s banking regulator…pushing financial institutions to establish creditor committees.”
Read more selections from the cascade of recent commentary on debt in China on The China Project:
- July 14: China’s economic growth is steady, but many challenges remain
- July 21: State-owned companies still addicted to debt
- July 26: A real overhaul of China’s state-owned enterprises?
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Lasers
How China’s military weapons inspired invention of a laser cannon to clean power lines / SCMP
“There are no government regulations on the use of high-power lasers in public areas in China.” -
Pyramid schemes
China accuses Canadian-Chinese tycoon of major role in pyramid scheme / The Globe and Mail -
Tech companies
China’s Baidu profit jumps as focus on mobile, AI narrows / Reuters
China’s Ofo in talks to raise $1 billion, led by SoftBank: sources / Reuters -
Starbucks
Starbucks doubles down on China, targets 5,000 stores by 2021 / Forbes
Starbucks gets jolt with $1.3 billion purchase of east China business / Caixin -
Airline industry
Air France says Delta, China Eastern each acquiring 10% of its shares / WSJ (paywall) -
Africa
‘China is everywhere’ in Africa’s rising technology industry / CNBC -
U.S.-China business
Value of U.S. deals in China sinks on rising trade tensions / Reuters






