(Reuters) -
China's state banks make money "too easily" and their monopoly on
financial services has to be broken if cash-starved private enterprises are to
get access to capital when they need it, state media cited Premier Wen Jiabao
as saying on Tuesday.
Wen's
comments, carried on China National Radio, come days after Beijing gave the
go-ahead for financial reforms in Wenzhou - known as the country's cradle of
private enterprise - that will encourage private investment in local banks.
"Frankly,
our banks make profits far too easily. Why? Because a small number of major
banks occupy a monopoly position, meaning one can only go to them for loans and
capital," China National Radio quoted Wen as telling local businesses at a
roundtable discussion.
"That's
why right now, as we're dealing with the issue of getting private capital into
the finance sector, essentially, that means we have to break up their
monopoly," the radio news service reported Wen as saying on its website.
The Big
Four banks, including Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (601398.SS), Bank
of China (601988.SS), Agricultural Bank of China (601288.SS) and China
Construction Bank (601939.SS), have long maintained a stranglehold on virtually
every aspect of the financial services industry.
But in past
years, Beijing has carried out a range of reforms in cities such as coastal
Wenzhou. Last month, the Cabinet approved a pilot project it hopes will one day
form a cornerstone of nationwide financial sector reforms.
Private
investors in Wenzhou will be encouraged to buy into local banks and to set up
financial institutions such as loan companies and rural community banks, the
State Council said in a statement posted on the government's website last week.
CENTRAL
GOVERNMENT UNIFIED
Beijing
hopes that cash-starved small businesses - vital to employment in the world's
second largest economy - will be able to access financing more easily and
cheaply.
"The
central government is unified on this, and you've seen the Wenzhou experiment
ensue. I think, Wenzhou has had some successes, that should be replicated
nationally," Wen was cited as saying. "In fact, some can immediately
be kicked off countrywide."
Allowing
private investors to lend via legal entities will also help Beijing tame an
underground lending market, where annualized interest rates can reach 100
percent. The People's Bank of China estimated that market at 2.4 trillion yuan
as of the end of March 2010, or 5.6 percent of total lending.
Many
private businesses turn to grey-market lending because they lack the
connections to access loans at official rates, which primarily flow from
state-owned banks to state-owned enterprise.
The idea of
a financial reform zone emerged late last year after media reports surfaced
about Wenzhou entrepreneurs who had gone into hiding or committed suicide after
they were unable to repay high interest on under-the-counter loans.
The local
central bank branch estimates underground lending in Wenzhou at 110 billion
yuan. About a third of that is used for real economic activities, with the rest
going to speculative investments, according to media reports.
(Reporting
By Edwin Chan; Editing by Xavier Briand)

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