Accelerating rural financial reform and making it
easier for people in rural areas to access capital are key parts of
the country's effort to reform its overall financial system,
according to the National Financial Work Conference.
The conference called for measures to improve
financial services in rural areas to support the government's plan
to create a "new socialist countryside".
The government is to speed up the establishment of a
wide-reaching multi-level, sustainable financial system in rural
areas, which have been underserved by the existing financial
system.
The conference called for commercial,
policy-financing, cooperative and other financial institutions to
enter the market of rural finance.
The meeting produced "crucial ideas for future rural
financial reform", said Lin Yifu, of Peking University.
Lin said China's current financial structure does not
give sufficient support to rural areas, leaving many farmers and
rural businesses without the capital they need to
develop.
He added that rural finance is the weakest point in
the country's entire financial system.
Low profits for rural cooperatives, a lack of rural
financial products and services and the difficulty many farmers
experience in securing loans are some of the problems plaguing the
rural financial system.
Official statistics show that people in rural areas
have less access to financial services than their urban
counterparts. Only 60 percent of the 120 million rural households
that need bank loans are able to access them.
At present, farmers are responsible for only 15
percent of the country's total bank loans and deposits. Per capita
borrowing among farmers amounted to 5,000 yuan at the end of 2005,
less than 10 percent of the amount in cities. Detailed measures to
address the situation are expected soon.
At the conference, Premier Wen Jiabao called for the establishment of
diversified financial institutions and microfinance services in
rural areas.
To this end, the China Banking Regulatory Commission
launched a pilot program in Sichuan, Gansu, Qinghai, Hubei, Jilin and the Inner Mongolia last month that made it easier
for financial institutions to open outlets in rural
areas.
(China Daily January 22,
2007)
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