this post was submitted on 18 Jan 2026
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traingang
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It is based on the recent announcement for HSR development under 15th Five Year Plan.
There are only 6 HSR lines that are making profit:
They all add to ~2300km.
Correct. Most public transits are not expected to be profitable, which is why many public transit companies also double as REITs to take advantage of the real estate prices as transit infrastructures are built. The most prominent example right now is Shenzhen Metro that has transfused billions to save the property developer giant Vanke from sinking.
Additionally, many railway companies are being restructured into joint-stock companies to securitize their railway assets as asset-backed securities, in other words, financialization of the public infrastructure to make money. You can read the article from People’s Daily here.
The numbers came from the link I posted in the comment above.
This is a very long story that you can read from my previous effort post here, which really started with the 1994 Tax Sharing Reform. Long story short is that the new tax sharing arrangements prompted local governments to seek non-tax revenues to finance their own budget, and the result was unleashing of the property market, starting from Zhu Rongji’s policy in 1998, accelerated under the 4 trillion yuan stimulus drive in 2007, and the final bang with the 2015 Monetization of Shantytown Redevelopment policy (棚改政策).
Public transits are great ways to stimulate regional and satellite cities growth, and a lot of investment were poured into building new stations to connect the provincial towns and building new cities/residential areas. Some of the areas genuinely benefited from the infrastructure growth, but many others were recklessly built with the local governments competing with one another to boost their GDP numbers and made great career promotions along the way.
The problem now is that there is an oversupply in housing, and with the property prices plunging, the local governments are losing their land premium revenue while having to service a mounting amount of debt taken out for these infrastructure building.
Nobody actually knows the true scale of the debt, since much of the debt taken out before 2015 were from shadow banks (LGFVs) and were off the books (at least opaque to the public).
What we do know is that the November 2024 policy to help service the debt (化债 but not sure the exact term in English) was a 12 trillion yuan solution, which
This was the last “big policy” being instituted by the central government to help with the local government debt servicing. The exact amount is almost certainly to be much larger than 12 trillion yuan, probably a few times that, since many local governments are still reporting financial distress at the moment.