BEIJING, Oct. 26 (Xinhua) -- Without a microcredit of
20,000 yuan, Shan Xinhui, a laid-off woman, would not have been able to start
her own business and today boast fixed assets worth more than two million yuan.
At the 2006 China Banking Association-Citigroup Micro-entrepreneurship Awards Ceremony, Shan, from the western
city of Yan'an in Shannxi Province, showed her appreciation for the government
and the microcredit fund that gave her the seed money.
But, in obtaining a microcredit, Shan was one of the
lucky few.
Statistics shows that only 27.3 of China's rural
households have benefited from microcredits provided by rural credit
cooperatives. The total value of microcredit loans distributed by over 100
microcredit institutions is merely one billion yuan.
Noted Chinese economist Mao Yushi said at the
ceremony: "Although China's government has achieved a great deal in poverty
reduction, there has been no obvious progress in the operation of microcredits."
"A lack of funding and the unclear legal status of
microcredit institutions have caused a terrible bottleneck in Chinese
microcredit," said Du Xiaoshan, an expert from the Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences.
"Poor business capacity, unproven operational models
and a shortage of competent professionals are adding to the problems," he said.
Du Xiaoshan told Xinhua that China's finance industry
has to get rid of some mistaken notions.
"In other countries, microcredit institutions keep
providing new loans to people with good track records, but in China people can
only get loans once," he said.
"The poorest people have the best credit, because
they know the value of borrowed money," said Du.
Dr. Muhammad Yunus, winner of the 2006 Nobel Peace
Prize, also criticized China's microcredit system.
In a meeting with Wu Xiaoling, governor of the
People's Bank of China, the central bank, he questioned China's practice of
allowing microcredit institutions to issue loans but not allowing them to take
in saving deposits.
Wu admitted that serious financial risks in rural
areas had led the regulator to stop issuing banking licenses in recent years.
Mao Yushi suggested that banks such as the
Agricultural Development Bank could provide low-interest-rate loans to rural
credit cooperatives, who would then give microcredit loans to the poor.
"We must find a way to put the operation of
microcredit institutions on a sure footing. Otherwise no competent professionals
or investors will join the cause," said Bai Chengyu, chairman of the China
Association for Microfinance.
A total of 113 people received this year's
Micro-entrepreneurship Award at Thursday's ceremony.