The China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) has
publicized policies and regulations to facilitate banks' entry in
the countryside.
According to the regulations, domestic and foreign
funded banks as well as other Chinese firms and persons are allowed
to establish village banks to provide financial services for rural
people and industry.
Village banks can attract deposits from the public,
give loans of short, middle and long term, conduct domestic
liquidation service, engage in bill acceptance and inter-bank
credits, issue bank cards, and underwriting governmental bonds, the
regulations said.
The regulations allow domestic commercial banks or
rural cooperative banks to set up credit companies that specially
provide loans for farmers and rural economy.
Rural people and enterprises are allowed to set up
small-sized financial organizations that attract savings from or
give loans to their members, the regulations said.
The CBRC has received applications from Minsheng Bank,
Beijing Rural Commercial Bank, Tianjin Rural Cooperation Bank and
four other domestic banks to establish rural
subsidiaries.
The CBRC, the country's banking watchdog, promulgated
The Proposals on Adjusting and Relaxing Market-entry Policies for
the Banking Institutions in Rural Areas on Dec. 20,
2006.
The move is to improve the financial services, enlarge
the financial network and solve the problems of insufficient
banking service and incomplete competition in rural
areas.
(Xinhua News Agency January 31, 2007)
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