Fri, Oct 11, 2019 - 2:51 PM

[BEIJING] China's hidden capital flight surged to a record high in the first half of this year, suggesting that residents wanting to move money abroad are using unrecorded transactions to evade tight capital controls.

That's according to the Washington-based Institute of International Finance (IIF), which said the "net errors and omissions" in China's balance of payments, widely seen as an indicator of concealed capital flight, rose to a record high of US$131 billion in the first six months of this year. That was larger than the average US$80 billion recorded during the same period in 2015 and 2016, when outflow pressures intensified, it said.

"Resident capital continued to leave the country via unrecorded transactions," said the IIF's head of China research Gene Ma in an Oct 10 note. While recorded resident outflows of US$74 billion were the smallest in 10 years, "the true extent of capital flight seems underreported", Mr Ma wrote.

Net errors and omissions is a category present in balance of payments accounting to reflect flows that can't be explained elsewhere. Discrepancies in tourism data can also be used to spot the practice of citizens using activities like property purchases or buying life insurance abroad to squirrel money offshore.

A separate Bloomberg measure estimating capital flows showed outflows were about US$226 billion in the first seven months of this year, about 19 per cent higher than in the same period in 2018.

SEE ALSO: Emerging markets hit by worst outflows since Trump election[1]

While growth concerns will weigh on China's outlook next year, Mr Ma expects relatively balanced net flows in 2020. China's inclusion in global stock indices and its phased inclusion in...

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