Is China's massive $50 trillion debt a ticking time bomb? Not according to Zhang Bin, a senior researcher at the China Finance 40 Forum (CF40), who argues the numbers don't tell the full story. 🕵️♂️
Low Inflation, Strong Currency 💹
Zhang highlights China's decade-long inflation rate below 2% – lower than most major economies – paired with a 15% rise in the renminbi's value 🌏. “This shows balanced financial growth and stable purchasing power,” he says.
Global Comparisons 📉 vs 📈
While China's debt-to-GDP ratio sits at 288%, its financial assets ratio (3.6) trails far behind the U.S. (13.4) and Japan (15.7). Zhang suggests this means China's economy still has room to maneuver. 🛣️
Government Borrowing as Stability Tool 🛡️
Nearly half of debt growth comes from public spending, which Zhang says acts like an “economic shock absorber” during private sector fluctuations. Think of it as national-scale risk management. 🤝
His takeaway? Debt metrics alone can't predict crises – low interest rates and controlled inflation matter more for sustainable growth. 📌
Reference(s):
China's debt not excessive despite high leverage, CF40 expert says
cgtn.com