Creating Financial Infrastructure in a Large Transition Economy – Lessons from China’s New Credit Bureau

International Financial Corporation (IFC) and the World Bank have in recent years promoted the implementation of credit bureaus as a way of improving access to finance for both individuals and businesses. In 2003, no such structure existed for consumer credit information in China. Not only was access to financing reduced, but the quality of the entire lending industry was also affected nonperforming loans represented a significant proportion of the portfolio, risk management practices were weak, and loans were poorly monitored. However, as this smart lesson describes, creating financial infrastructure such as a consumer credit bureau in large countries presents a unique set of challenges.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paramanathan, Prashan, Huang, Lin
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2009-04
Subjects:ACCESS TO FINANCE, ACCESS TO FINANCING, ADVISORY SERVICES, BANK OFFICIALS, BANKING SYSTEM, BANKS, BEST PRACTICE, BUSINESS INFORMATION, CENTRAL BANK, COMMERCIAL BANKS, CONSUMER, CONSUMER CREDIT, CREDIT BUREAU, CREDIT BUREAUS, CREDIT EXPERIENCE, CREDIT INFORMATION, CREDIT INFORMATION SYSTEM, CREDIT REPORTING, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, FINANCIAL INFRASTRUCTURE, FINANCIAL SERVICES, FINANCIAL SERVICES INDUSTRY, INFORMATION SERVICES, INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT, INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS, JOINT-STOCK COMPANY, LARGE BANKS, LENDER, LENDERS, LIQUIDITY, LOCAL INSTITUTIONS, MEDIUM ENTERPRISE, MICROFINANCE, NEW CREDIT, NONPAYMENT, NONPERFORMING LOANS, PORTFOLIO, PRIVATE CREDIT, PRIVATE CREDIT BUREAU, PRIVATE ENTERPRISE, PROSPERITY, REPUTATION, RISK MANAGEMENT, SAVINGS, STAKEHOLDERS, TRANSITION ECONOMY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/04/10618006/creating-financial-infrastructure-large-transition-economy-lessons-chinas-new-credit-bureau
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/10567
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