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Resolving China's Zombies: Tackling Debt and Raising Productivity

Waikei Lam, Alfred Schipke, Yuyan Tan and Zhibo Tan

No 2017/266, IMF Working Papers from International Monetary Fund

Abstract: Nonviable “zombie” firms have become a key concern in China. Using novel firm-level industrial survey data, this paper illustrates the central role of zombies and their strong linkages with stateowned enterprises (SOEs) in contributing to debt vulnerabilities and low productivity. As a group, zombie firms and SOEs account for an outsized share of corporate debt, contribute to much of the rise in debt, and face weak fundamentals. Empirical results also show that resolving these weak firms can generate significant gains of 0.7–1.2 percentage points in long-term growth per year. These results also shed light on the ongoing government strategy to tackle these issues by evaluating the effects of different restructuring options. In particular, deleveraging, reducing government subsidies, as well as operational restructuring through divestment and reducing redundancy have significant benefits in restoring corporate performance for zombie firms.

Keywords: WP; zombie firm; company; public enterprise; government; China; corporate debt; state-owned enterprises; debt restructuring; zombie firms; firm identification code; nonviable company; capital frowth; liability-to-asset ratio; overcapacity firm; steel firm; revenue data; Public enterprises; Productivity; Total factor productivity; Asset management; Debt burden (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 26
Date: 2017-11-27
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (9)

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