BEIJING, Feb. 8 (Xinhua) -- A special ordinance on the bankruptcy of banking and financial institutions is being devised so as to establish a market-oriented bail-out mechanism, according to the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC).
The legal instrument would provide a supplement to the revised
corporate bankruptcy law that came into effect last June and target the
specialities of financial areas, CBRC sources said.
No time frame for the legislative process of the ordinance is
available yet.
Given banks serve as the stablizer of the economy, the ordinance must
be able to minimize the aftermath of bankruptcy of banks and financial
institutions and simultaneously provide the maximum protection to the interests
of depositors, creditors and taxpayers, industry analysts say.
With the fully opening-up of financial areas, local banks and
financial institutions will face fiercer competition. Only by allowing
incompetent and highly risky players to withdraw from the market can a country
defuse any financial crisis and safeguard domestic financial system, they say.
The process of bankruptcy for Chinese banks over the past decades
have been referred to as "administrative closure" because most banks are
state-owned and virtually became an arm of governmental departments.
With the central bank serving as their last creditor and rescuer,
banks and financial institutions prosper on government credits but also tend to
be less sensitive to risks than their western
peers.