McKinsey & Company Skip main navigation

Insights & Publications

Report| McKinsey Global Institute

Putting China's capital to work: The real value of financial system reform

May 2006 | byDiana Farrell, Susan Lund, Jaeson Rosenfeld, Fabrice Morin, Niyati Gupta, Ezra Greenberg

Download

China’s financial system has been highly successful in mobilizing savings, but it has fallen short in its task of allocating capital to the most productive players in the economy.

Interactive

China's financial system composition

China's financial system composition

Explore the findings of MGI's research on China's financial system, how the system's performance stacks up, and the value of further reform.

Savings from households, for example, often are not channeled to the best available investment opportunities.

Nonperforming loans are the most conspicuous outcome of this misallocation. Yet MGI research shows that the much larger volume of loans to underperforming ventures that don’t go bad but yield only negligible returns are potentially more costly to China’s economy.

Increasing the operating efficiency of China’s financial institutions and improving the mix of financing vehicles would boost GDP by $62 billion a year. Reforms that enabled a larger share of funding to go to more productive enterprises would increase investment efficiency, raise GDP further by up to $259 billion.

Two major opportunities for reform remain:

  • Improving the allocation of capital to the most productive investment opportunities in the economy
  • Addressing the operational inefficiencies in each of the system’s components.

With a more integrated approach to reforms, China’s financial system could lead to an enormous increase in wealth for China’s people.

McKinsey Global Institute

McKinsey Global Institute

Our business and economics research arm, informing management and policy decisions since 1990.more