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China Faces Growing Public Debt Pressures: The Alarming Numbers
By the end of 2025, China’s public debt had reached a concerning figure: approximately 526.8 trillion yuan. This translates to an enormous per capita exposure of about 375,000 yuan per citizen. But these numbers are only the tip of the iceberg of a much more complex financial crisis that warrants in-depth analysis.
Expanding Fiscal Gap: When Spending Exceeds Revenue
The real pressure on public debt emerges from China’s own budget. In 2025, national budget revenues were projected to total 21,604.5 billion yuan, while expenditures reached 28,739.5 billion yuan. This creates a significant deficit:
28,739.5 - 21,604.5 = 7,135 billion yuan
This deficit accounts for 33% of total tax revenue and 5% of the projected GDP (140 trillion yuan). In other words, for every three yuan of revenue, one was used to cover the budget shortfall. The entire gap had to be mainly covered by issuing new public debt, creating a vicious cycle of borrowing.
The Invisible Cost: How Interest Payments Devour New Resources
According to data from the official website of the People’s Bank of China, the outstanding government bonds in circulation were expected to reach 95.44 trillion yuan by the end of 2025. Calculating at an average interest rate of 3.5%, annual interest payments amounted to approximately:
95.44 trillion yuan × 3.5% = 3.34 trillion yuan
This represents nearly 15.5% of all national tax revenues. Even more concerning, nearly 47% of the new debt issued that year (3.34 out of 7.14 trillion) was literally absorbed by interest payments alone, rather than funding actual public spending.
The Refinancing Trap: Debt Funding Itself
Analyzing the dynamic flow of debt reveals the true structural problem. In 2024, the total debt balance was 81.58 trillion yuan, with an expected increase to 95.44 trillion in 2025—a net rise of 13.86 trillion. However, the total planned debt issuance was 26.3 trillion yuan, divided as follows:
This means more than half of the new debt issued does not fund new activities but simply “extends” existing debt. It’s the classic scenario where debt funds itself.
Hidden Debt: When Official Figures Don’t Tell the Whole Story
The Chinese public debt situation appears even more critical when considering the broader picture. China’s private debt (households and businesses), excluding government bonds, amounts to about 370 trillion yuan. Including official public debt, the total approaches 470 trillion yuan. This does not even account for some implicit liabilities not reported in official statistics.
The pressure on China’s public debt is therefore not a short-term issue. It’s a structural dynamic where revenues can no longer keep pace with expenditures, interest costs are constantly rising, and an increasing portion of new resources is consumed servicing previous debt. Until the government can rebalance this relationship, the debt trap will continue tightening around the Chinese economy.