Promoting cross-border flow of financial resources through standardization

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This article is sourced from: Wuhu Daily

Wu Shiping

According to reports, banks in Wuhu and Taizhou, Zhejiang, recently signed a standardized cooperation agreement for cross-regional syndicated credit in the Yangtze River Delta, under which enterprises will receive a combined credit line of RMB 175 million. This move marks another substantive step forward for our city in exploring standardized, convenient cross-regional financial services.

For a long time, cross-regional financing has faced multiple obstacles. Banks in different places apply different standards, approval procedures vary, and risk-control requirements differ. Enterprises have to submit materials repeatedly, resulting in high time costs and making it difficult to improve financing efficiency. This fragmented model of financial services objectively constrains the cross-regional flow of capital, affects the overall vitality of the real economy, and also makes it hard to support large-scale industrial transfers.

The implementation of the standardized cooperation agreement is precisely targeted at the aforementioned pain points. The agreement incorporates five key steps—credit limits, pricing, approvals, and others—into a unified framework. After the rules are clarified, operations become more standardized; coordination between banks becomes smoother; and enterprises can handle matters more conveniently. By effectively lowering transaction costs arising from institutional arrangements, the unified standards significantly enhance the convenience of financial services and promote the efficient flow of financial resources. It should be said that this is not a simple process optimization, but an institutional-level collaborative innovation.

The Yangtze River Delta region has close industrial ties, and cross-regional business layouts have become the norm. Standardization provides institutional guarantees for the flow of funds, enabling financial services to extend along with enterprises. Its significance goes beyond the level of technical interfacing and reflects an update in the development philosophy—from “operating independently” to “co-governance in collaboration.”

It should be noted that cross-regional movement of financial resources will increase the difficulty of management. We should give equal weight to financial security and service efficiency, establish and improve early-warning mechanisms, clarify risk-responsibility sharing, use technological means to strengthen monitoring, build an information-sharing platform to improve risk-control precision, refine post-loan management procedures, promptly identify and resolve potential risks, and firmly hold the line on risk.

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