China's Rural Financial System
Households' Demand for Credit and Recent Reforms

Routledge Studies on the Chinese Economy Series

Author:

Language: English

Approximative price 53.83 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
China's Rural Financial System
Publication date:
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback

Approximative price 178.41 €

In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).

Add to cartAdd to cart
Financing reform in china's rural economy
Publication date:
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback

This book examines the credit needs and the borrowing behaviour of rural households in China in recent years. It is based on in-depth analysis of the status of households? indebtedness and borrowing behaviour; the performance of Rural Credit Cooperatives (RCCs), as well as resources of informal finance. Before 2006, RCCs are virtually the only source of formal credit for rural households in China and were subject to a series of reforms from 1996 to 2003. The reforms aimed to transform RCCs into market-oriented institutions and, more importantly, help them meet the increasing demands of farmers for varied financial services, and thereby contribute effectively to economic transformation in rural China.

Based on a micro-study of three villages, at different stages of development with dissimilar economic characteristics in Jiangxi province, this book investigates the sources of finance, formal and informal, in rural areas and the different types of credit that farmers require. It examines the patterns of credit required by rural households at different stages of agricultural processes, and the institutions from which they obtain loans. It demonstrates the importance of innovative institutional arrangements in rural China and new instruments that give farmers access to formal rural financial markets and enable them to utilize credit effectively, concluding that further reforms to RCCs are necessary for RCCs to be truly effective.

1. ‘San Nong’ Problems and the Challenges of the Rural Financial System in China 2. Literature Gap and Research Objectives 3. Fieldwork Villages, Procedures and the RCCs’ Pilot Program in Jiangxi 4. Households’ Indebtedness and Borrowing Behaviour in the Natural Village of Yao 5. Households’ Indebtedness and Borrowing Behaviour in the Natural Village of Wulitang 6. Households’ Indebtedness and Borrowing Behaviour in the Natural Village of Xiaobu 7. Analytical Summary of the Three Villages 8. Conclusion

Postgraduate

Yuepeng Zhao works in the Policy Research Department at the China Banking Regulatory Commission, Beijing, China. She was formerly Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge, UK.