Abstract

Rural economic development helps reduce the income inequality in China. Existing studies show the positive effects of rural reforms, however, whether the rural credit cooperative’s shareholding reform promotes rural economic development and whether effects are exerted through the synergism between agricultural producers and rural financial institutions remain unclear yet. Employing the rationale of isomorphic incentive compatibility from system science, we analyze the necessity and influencing conduit of rural credit cooperative’s shareholding reform theoretically. Analysis shows that only the financial services from rural commercial banks can promote the modernized production, and thus the synergism between them drives rural economic development. Then we make empirical analysis on the effect with a Chinese provincial sample. Comparing to provinces with lower reform progress, the provinces with greater reform progress are influenced more prominently by this reform. Applying coupling coordination degree model, the coordination between agricultural production and rural banking development shows obvious increase, especially after the formal implementation of shareholding reform on rural credit cooperative. Empirical results indicate that this synergism plays positive roles in promoting agricultural growth and reducing the urban–rural income gap. In addition, these effects are more pronounced after the formal implementation of shareholding reform.

Highlights

  • The rural China has undergone several institutional changes of banking in the last century [1]

  • Applying the rationale of system isomorphic incentive compatibility, this study evaluates the effect of Chinese RCC shareholding reform on rural economic development

  • We investigated whether the shareholding reform can promote agricultural growth, farmer income growth, and urban–rural gap reduction through the synergism between the agricultural production subsystem and rural banking subsystem

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Summary

Introduction

The rural China has undergone several institutional changes of banking in the last century [1]. Rural credit cooperative has become a dominant supplier of credit to farm production and SMEs (small and medium enterprises) in rural China since the middle of 1990s [2]. Chinese guiding document in 1999 defines rural credit cooperative is an organization aiming at solving credit shortages of members in livelihood and agricultural production, whose members are usually rural households and offer a majority of founding capital [5]). Led by the government, this institutional change has been transforming the institutional form of rural credit cooperative in the city and county level [7]. (Chinese administrative districts consist of four levels from large to small, province, city, county, and township.

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