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China’s Consumer Debt Crisis Stalls Beijing’s Spending Drive

One in ten Chinese adults fell behind on debt payments in 2025, as record-breaking loan defaults collide with government efforts to stimulate the economy. While Beijing pushes for credit-fueled consumption, banks are tightening standards to shield themselves from a swelling 2.22 trillion yuan pile of non-performing retail loans.

China’s Consumer Debt Crisis Stalls Beijing’s Spending Drive

The dilemma facing Beijing is stark: the state demands more lending to revive a stuttering economy, yet the only citizens actively seeking credit are those struggling to stay afloat. For 27-year-old telecoms worker Jack Chen, this reality means a 140,000 yuan debt burden that has rendered him unable to secure new loans, despite a previously spotless credit history. His situation mirrors a broader trend where a bleak labor market and a lingering property slump have pushed household defaults to unprecedented levels.

Commercial banks, wary of the rising risk, are resisting pressure from the People's Bank of China to expand lending. Instead, lenders are quietly restructuring debt or granting payment extensions to avoid classifying accounts as non-performing. State-owned giants like the Bank of Communications and retail-focused institutions such as China Merchants Bank have both reported climbing delinquency ratios. Analysts warn that these figures likely understate the true scale of the crisis.

Economists argue that the government’s focus on credit access ignores the root cause of the slowdown: stagnant income growth and a fragile social safety net. As long as households remain burdened by uncertainty, subsidies for borrowing are failing to entice even those with good credit. Pushing cheaper credit at households without rising incomes merely risks compounding the delinquency cycle, leaving the nation's consumption-led recovery strategy caught in a dangerous feedback loop.

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