Critical portion in World Bank’s report removed
THE World Bank has removed a sharply critical portion from a recently released report on China’s economy that called for reform of its financial system, saying the section had not been adequately reviewed and that its wording was inappropriate.
On Wednesday, the Washington-based institution released its China Economic Update report in Beijing, which included a section urging the country to accelerate reform of its state-dominated financial sector.
In blunt language, the World Bank warned that failure to address the issue could end “three decades of stellar performance” for the world’s second-largest economy.
“Wasteful investment, overindebtedness, and a weakly regulated shadow-banking system,” had to be addressed for China’s broader reform agenda to succeed, it said.
The organization, however, said in an update to the report that the section had been removed as it had not undergone proper vetting procedures.
Contacted for further comment yesterday, the World Bank provided a statement by Bert Hofman, its country director for China.
“The decision to withdraw this section of the report was taken because it did not fully follow our internal review and clearance processes and therefore its tone was not consistent with our standard of discourse with member governments,” Hofman said.
“To ensure full transparency, we disclosed the change on our website and in the updated report. We will continue to provide analysis and advice on China’s financial sector going forward.”
Hofman also said the World Bank has previously identified financial reform as “critical” for China’s development.
He added that China has acted on decisions taken at an important Party meeting in 2013 by pursuing changes including liberalizing lending rates, taking steps to curtail so-called shadow banking practices and providing more access to foreign investors to the country’s capital markets.
“Taken together, these are critical reforms that move China toward a more market-based allocation of capital,” he said.
The expunged section of the report had noted that the Chinese state exerts strong control over a majority of commercial bank assets, “making it an outlier by international standards.”
In some cases, the report added, authorities were simultaneously owners, regulators and customers of banks.
“Financial reform will only prove effective if it removes the distorted incentives and poor governance structures that have affected how financial resources are mobilized and allocated,” the report said.
“As now seen, a fundamentally reconfigured role of the state in the financial system is essential to change these incentives and structures.”
China is engineering a transformation of its growth model whereby consumer demand becomes the main driver rather than investment.
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