At the very backbone of the Chinese economy sits small and
medium enterprises (SMEs) which contribute 58.5 percent of gross
domestic product (GDP), 68.3 percent of exports, 69 percent of
imports and 43 percent of the country's tax revenue. SMEs employ 75
percent of the urban workforce, and 74 percent of China's technical
innovation comes from them. However, difficulties in financing and
a shortage of capital have become a bottleneck hindering them from
developing properly.
According to statistics from the People's Bank of China, 98.7
percent of SME capital comes from banks while only 1.3 percent from
direct financing such as stocks. From the limited channels
available for financing, only 10 percent of SMEs can secure a bank
loan partly because of the information they must supply to the
lender, difficulties with risk evaluation and low credibility.
However, the rapid development of SMEs provides room for the
transformation of commercial banks.
At the Dialogue Between Fortune 500 and APEC SMEs, a key forum
of the Fourth Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Small and Medium
Enterprises Technology Conference and Fair held on May 17-21 in
Qingdao, Shandong Province, how to explore a credit
market to achieve success both for SMEs and banks became a hot
issue.
High-ranking officials from Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of
Communication and the Export-Import Bank of China presented their
thoughts on expanding and updating their services for SMEs.
They agreed on the establishment of an effective credit
examination and an approval system to simplify evaluation
procedures. The threshold for SMEs to get small and short-term
loans should be lowered.
They suggested that risk pricing and management mechanisms be
set up to classify SMEs on capability, collateral, credibility and
capabilities with after service.
They considered a special fund and evaluation system necessary
to facilitate SMEs to get bank loans. In addition a violation
response mechanism should be in place to record credit worthiness,
they said.
All the three banks expressed their willingness to offer SMEs
with more products. Bank of Communication, for instance, has
granted more guarantee options, accepting the likes of property
mortgages, joint guarantees and export credit insurance.
At the end of April, the Bank of Communication had nearly 30,000
SME customers. Of its total loan volume, 47.8 percent went to SMEs,
a 13.9 percent increase over the same period of last year.
The Export-Import Bank of China (China Eximbank) is one of
China's three policy banks. It has established a system of direct
loans and a financing platform to provide export funding services
for SMEs.
In cooperation with local governments, it has launched pilot
programs in Anhui Province and signed agreements with Inner
Mongolia Autonomous Region to support SMEs with overseas
investment.
China Eximbank also provides information and has set up
communication links between large enterprises and SMEs, helping
them to get involved in joint financing. It encourages and supports
capable, high-tech SMEs to gain entry to international markets by
merger and acquisition.
Meanwhile, Vice Governor of Eximbank Li Jun identified the need
for SMEs to establish their credibility and to consolidate the
basis for cooperation between them and commercial banks.
At the moment 99 percent of Chinese businesses are SMEs and many
of them have performed well in the market and gained high
credibility.
(China.org.cn by staff reporter Li Shen, May 26, 2006)