Want China Times, Xinhua 2015-04-01
The Chinese government announced on Tuesday that it will implement the long-awaited bank deposit insurance scheme in May, taking a key step in the country's financial reform.
| The People's Bank of China in Beijing. (File photo/CNS) |
The Chinese government announced on Tuesday that it will implement the long-awaited bank deposit insurance scheme in May, taking a key step in the country's financial reform.
From May,
financial institutions will be required to pay insurance premiums into a fund
that will be managed by an agency appointed by the State Council, according to
a statement posted on the government website.
The scheme
is designed to return bank clients' deposits if their bank suffers insolvency
or bankruptcy. The reimbursement will be drawn from the new fund in the case of
the deposit being 500,000 yuan (US$81,400) or less, which applies to 99.63% of
Chinese depositors, said the statement.
The
reimbursement shall be paid within seven working days, according to the deposit
insurance scheme's regulations.
Banks will
pay also indemnity with their own assets to those who have deposited more than
500,000 yuan.
The scheme
will cover both RMB deposits and foreign currency deposits from individuals as
well as companies. Both the principal and interest are under protection by the
scheme.
A separate
statement quoted an unnamed official as saying, "The scheme will help
build public confidence in the financial market, straighten the relationship
between government and the market... and maintain financial stability."
Deposit
insurance schemes are an important part of any financial safety net. More than
110 countries and regions have established such schemes. The scheme has long
been considered a precondition for China to free up deposit rates — the last
step in interest rate liberalization.
Guo
Tianyong, a professor at Beijing's Central University of Finance and Economics,
stressed the importance of the scheme to broader economic reform. "Whether
it is full liberalization of deposit rates or more approvals of private banks
that China will push forward in the future, the country first needs a safety
net in the shape of a deposit insurance scheme."
Guo said
the scheme will help the development of small banks as it will make depositors
more confident in them.
Chen Hufei,
an analyst at Bank of Communications, said the scheme has to some extent
reminded depositors of the potential risks of saving all their money as bank
deposits, and will likely encourage them to diversify asset allocations via
multiple investment channels, such as pension insurance, wealth management
products, stocks, securities, and precious metals.
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