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El. knyga: Private Lending in China: Practice, Law, and Regulation of Shadow Banking and Alternative Finance

(Lecturer in Law at the University of Bristol, UK)
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This book explores China’s private lending market from historical, economic, legal, and regulatory perspectives. Private lending refers to moneylending agreements between a business borrowers and its debt investors without the involvement of banks. In China, it remains difficult for private entrepreneurs to obtain sufficient loans from state-owned banks. Thus, private lending has been a vital alternative financing channel for over 80 million businesses which are reliant on private funds as the major source of operating capital. The market volume of private financing stands at 5 trillion yuan ($783bn), making it one of the largest shadow banking systems in the world. Despite the wide popularity and systemic importance of private lending activities, they have remained outside of the official regulatory framework, leading to extra financial risks. In 2011, China’s private lending sector encountered a severe financial crisis, as thousands of business borrowers failed to repay debts and fell into bankruptcy. Lots of bosses who found it impossible to liquidate debts ran away to hide from creditors. The financial turmoil has caused substantial monetary losses for investors across the country, which triggered social unrests and undermined the financial stability.

This book is a timely work to demystify China’s private lending market by investigating its historical development, operating mechanism, and special characteristics. It evaluates the causes and effects of the latest financial crisis by considering a number of real cases relating to helpless investors and runaway bosses. It conducts an in-depth doctrinal analysis of Chinese laws and regulations regarding private lending transactions. It also examines China’s ongoing financial reform to bring underground lending activities under official supervision. Finally, the book points out future development paths for the private lending market. The book offers suggestions for global policymakers devising an effective regulatory framework over shadow banking. It appeals to researchers, lecturers, and students in several fields including law, business, finance, political economy, public policy, and China study.

List of figures and tables
ix
List of legislations
xi
Preface xiii
1 Introduction
1(16)
2 Private lending market: historical evolution and operating mechanism
17(27)
3 The private lending crisis: cause, effect, and risk
44(32)
4 The legal framework of private lending
76(31)
5 Regulating private lending: rationale and practice
107(28)
6 The future of private lending
135(26)
7 Conclusion
161(12)
Index 173
Lerong Lu is Lecturer in Law at the University of Bristol. Prior to this, he was a Teaching Fellow at the Dickson Poon School of Law, Kings College London. Dr Lu holds a Doctor of Philosophy in Law and a Master of Laws from the University of Leeds. He obtained his Bachelor of Laws and Bachelor of Economics degrees from the East China University of Political Science and Law. Dr Lus research interests lie in international financial law and regulation, and he has published extensively in the fields of shadow banking and fintech. Dr Lu is a qualified attorney-at-law in the Peoples Republic of China.