BEIJING, Sept. 14 (Xinhua) -- The China Association
of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs) is scheduling a series of "speed
dating" sessions in 14 cities this year to introduce SMEs to new financing
sources, China Daily reported Monday.
A pilot event was held in Shiyan, known as China's
motor city, in central China's Hubei province, in May. Contracts of nearly 1.8
billion yuan (about 257 million U.S. dollars) were signed in the city. Another
pilot matchmaking event was held in northeast China's Jilin Province in August,
the newspaper said.
Preliminary agreements for 2.4 billion yuan in
investments were reached involving more than 100 SMEs and 20 funds in Jilin.
The difficulty of SME financing has been highlighted
during the economic slowdown. In 2008, more than 700,000 SMEs went bankrupt, the
newspaper said, citing Li Zibin, head of the Chinese Association of SME (CASME).
Li said equity financing can become a major
resolution to the problem, given that SMEs usually don't have enough credit or
guarantees to obtain bank loans.
Apart from money, attendees mentioned the advantage
of value-added service by tying the knot with funds.
Zhang Yuanda, vice secretary-general of CASME, said
the critical problem is with the SMEs themselves because irregular management
and an unclear development direction often discouraged banks and funds from
supporting them.
In August, a State Council executive meeting adopted
a decision urging more active measures to help SMEs overcome financing
difficulties to achieve sound, rapid development.
Special Report: Global Financial Crisis