|
BOAO, Hainan, April 23 (Xinhua) -- China could rest easy with its abundant
domestic capital as well as huge inflows of foreign investment, says Vincent
Cheng, chairman of the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited (HSBC),
at the on-going Boao Forum for Asia (BFA) Annual Conference 2006.
Cheng said that the access to capital is not a challenge that China will
face as it re-emerges as a major global power. "This country's high savings'
rate will likely translate into an ever-larger pool of investible domestic
capital," he said, adding that significant flows of foreign direct investment
(FDI) will continue to seize opportunities offered by the Chinese government.
China needs to develop a robust banking system that can withstand economic
fluctuations, in order to handle the growing capital from both domestic savings
and inflows of FDI, he said. Inaddition, the system should be able to
efficiently allocate capital and balance demand between competing users of
credit.
The transition to a more efficient banking system will also invite
development in legal infrastructure, Cheng said. "A new bankruptcy law --long in
process -- is necessary to help restore debt-payment capacity among viable
firms."
There are still challenges that China does face in the process of stepping
up financial reforms, said Cheng. Those challenges include trying to avoid
non-performing fund when the economy decelerates, building up more of a credit
culture in domestic banks, implementing enhanced corporate governance practices
at alllevels of the banking sector and in other sectors as well.
Other challenges include further developing and deepening the country's
equity and bond markets, and maintaining the appropriatepace of reform amid a
transformation that is unprecedented in terms of sheer scale and in terms of
complexity.
He said it is also important that China should learn from international
experience and make the best use of it. Enditem |