BEIJING, Nov. 14 (Xinhua) -- A senior Chinese central
bank official said on Friday that financing conditions had improved for small
and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in recent months, reflecting government
moves to increase their access to loans.
Yi Gang, vice governor of the People's Bank of China
(PBOC), cited a record increase in total loans and a surge in the amount of
commercial paper, which is often used or held by SMEs.
"Many small and medium-sized enterprises probably
secured more loans from commercial banks, as total loans made in the first 10
months reached a record high of 3.66 trillion yuan," Yi told a press conference
here. The amount he mentioned is equivalent to 535.9 billion U.S. dollars.
Yi pointed out that the PBOC in August raised this
year's credit quota by 5 percent for national commercial banks and 10 percent
for local commercial banks. The move was aimed at easing the financial
difficulties of SMEs.
Central bank statistics showed that commercial paper
increased by 60.8 billion yuan in October, the largest rise ever. That gain was
15 percent more than the rise of 52.8 billion yuan recorded in August. The
figure for September was not contained in the PBOC reports on its website.
It is often difficult for SMEs to borrow from
commercial banks, and many SMEs have struggled since last year amid the credit
squeeze that developed as a result of previous PBOC tight money policies.
Experts have long contended that financing difficulty
was a critical bottleneck to the growth of the SMEs.
Yi told reporters the financing difficulty of SMEs
would be further eased with "moderately active" monetary policies that have been
put in place.
More than 95 percent of SMEs are privately owned and
many are in the export sector. They generate almost 60 percent of GDP, 50
percent of tax revenues, 68 percent of exports and 75 percent of new jobs every
year.
Apart from improving access to loans, the government
has taken other measures to support SMEs. For example, it has raised export tax
rebates three times so far during the second half.