China
has uncovered $10bn (£6.1bn) worth of fake trades as part of a nationwide
crackdown on companies.
The
currency regulator said 15 fraud cases had been handed over to the police for
prosecution.
Companies
sometimes falsify transactions as a way of GETTING MONEY in and out of China.
"Fake
trade deals can do severe harm to ...the overall economy" said Wu Ruilin,
deputy head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE).
"They
not only increase the pressure of hot money inflows, but also provide illegal
channels for cross-border capital flows," he added.
Blame
has also been placed on
banks operating in China.
"Some
banks facilitated the abnormal increase in transit trade financing and fake
trade deals by failing to fulfil the responsibility of authenticity checks and
offering services of transit trade financing and receipt and payment," Mr
Wu was quoted as saying in Xinhua - the state news agency.
The
crackdown STARTED in 13 provinces and cities last year, and has widened to 24
this year.
China
has strict capital control regulations, which set limits on the purchase and
sale of overseas assets by its residents. It also has similar restrictions on the
BUYING and selling of Chinese assets by foreigners.
The
global commodities markets were shaken in June last year, when an investigation
into trade fraud in China showed companies had used fake receipts at a port in
Qingdao, in east China, to obtain multiple loans using the same cargo of copper
as collateral.
That
prompted international banks and trading houses to launch a series of lawsuits
over their exposure, which was estimated to be around $900m.
BBC
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