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Why China cannot have a 'Lehman moment'

While the mainland's financial system has serious problems, it's unlikely to ever suffer a 'Lehman moment' that would ripple across the globe

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People are going to be discussing the flaws of Chinese finance for many years. Here's a helpful guide: as soon as you see or hear "China's Lehman moment" used seriously, stop paying attention.

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China cannot have a Lehman moment. Its financial system does not work the way America's (or Japan's or Italy's) does.

In fact, it is not clear how China can suffer any sort of acute financial crisis. And it is extremely unlikely that, if such a crisis did occur, it would do lasting harm to the global financial system.

It is certainly true that Chinese finance has serious problems. The durable ones stem from dominant public ownership and the non-commercial behaviour it causes.

Deviating from commercial principles in finance promotes waste, starting with rolling over loans so state firms do not go out of business. Beijing covers up the waste by reporting levels of non-performing assets no one should believe.

A noncommercial system … is probably only as weak as its strongest link

The harmful incentives will hardly be reversed by the Communist Party's promise to establish all of five private banks this year.

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