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Inner Mongolia, in China’s north, said earlier this month its fiscal revenue for 2016 should be 26 per cent lower. Photo: Simon Song

Fitch warns of ratings cut for local governments in China if data revisions prove major

Agency says recent falsification by provincial officials might highlight shortcomings in auditing process

Fitch Ratings on Tuesday warned it would take ratings action against Chinese local governments if revisions to their fiscal data were significant, after recent reports on fake economic data deepened concerns about governance and oversight.

Local and regional governments in China have long been suspected of cooking up numbers. Blame is often put on ambitious local officials trying to brighten their career prospects by delivering stellar work reports.

The agency’s comments come after Inner Mongolia earlier this month said its fiscal revenue for 2016 ought to be 26 per cent – or 53 billion yuan (US$8.3 billion) – less than initially stated.

Fitch reacted by downgrading its internal assessment of the creditworthiness of the northern Chinese region. It also cut the ratings on the senior unsecured bonds due 2020 issued by Inner Mongolia High-Grade Highway Construction and Development Company to BBB- from BBB, with a negative outlook.

Local and regional governments globally do not have internationally accepted accounting policies. In China, Fitch relies on official fiscal data from provincial and local administrations, which are then approved by the local legislatures.
Fitch has downgraded its internal assessment of the creditworthiness of Inner Mongolia. (Pictured) Work on a metro station is suspended in Baotou last November. Photo: Simon Song

Recent falsification by provincial governments might highlight shortcomings in the auditing process, particularly in terms of central government oversight, Fitch cautioned.

“We would expect recent data manipulation problems to prompt a focus on tighter supervision, including stronger and more transparent reporting requirements and stricter disciplinary measures to discourage falsification,” it said in a report.

The National Audit Office said in December that 10 city and county governments had been found to be inflating their fiscal revenue by a total of 1.5 billion yuan.

But the local authorities so far exposed for data manipulation represented only a small portion of the 44,000 local and regional governments across the country, Fitch said.

China would look into reports of irregularities in regional economic data, and would deal with any impropriety according to the law, the head of China’s statistics bureau said last week.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Inflating data could lead to ratings cut
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