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Back to EpisodesEp 68 - Can asset revitalization save local government finances?
Description
China’s local governments have spent the past four years grappling with the fallout from the property market collapse. Land sales have dried up, fiscal pressures remain intense, and officials across the country are still searching for sustainable new sources of revenue.
On this week’s Trivium China Podcast, host Andrew Polk is joined by Trivium’s Head of Markets Research Dinny McMahon to discuss one of the most important – and least understood – developments in China’s fiscal landscape: asset revitalization.
The two unpack how local governments are increasingly turning underutilized state-owned assets into new revenue streams, and why the strategy may become a key pillar of Beijing’s broader effort to stabilize local finances.
Their conversation covers:
- Why local governments remain under severe fiscal pressure after the collapse of the property market
- What “asset revitalization” actually means in practice
- How provinces are monetizing everything from mining rights and industrial land to transport hubs and public facilities
- How several local governments are already generating meaningful new revenue from the strategy
- The role asset revitalization could play in easing local government austerity and supporting domestic demand
- The risks of self-dealing, hidden leverage, and unsustainable one-off transactions
- Whether asset revitalization can become a durable solution to China’s local government debt and revenue challenges
While asset revitalization is unlikely to solve China’s fiscal problems on its own, Andrew and Dinny argue it may be emerging as one of the most important pieces of the local government finance puzzle – and a development investors and China watchers should be following closely.