Credit defaulters forced to repay 520b yuan in 1st half of 2018

BEIJING - Enforcement of court orders has enabled 520 billion yuan ($78.5 billion) in defaults to be repaid across China in the first half of 2018, a 44.06 percent rise year on year, the Supreme People's Court announced Tuesday.
Courts nationwide handled nearly 4.1 million cases and completed the enforcement of over 2.8 million cases during the six months, the top court said.
As of June 30 this year, more than 168,400 items, including houses and cars, involved in such cases had been sold via an online judicial auction network that began in March 2017, amounting to a total of nearly 378 billion yuan.
Chinese courts have blacklisted a total of 11.23 million credit defaulters from October 2013 to June 30, this year, and 2.8 million people have fulfilled legal obligations under the intensified punishment.
Credit defaulters were forced to repay 2.83 trillion yuan under court order enforcement in 2016 and 2017.
- Courts put pressure on defaulters via their kids
- Top court pledges to strictly punish verdict defaulters
- Blacklist forces 2.5m to comply with court orders
- More than 170,000 defaulters banned from senior management positions in China
- China improves credit blacklisting mechanism to avoid undue punishment
- Zhejiang leads in innovation, IP development
- Lotus sanctuary dazzles at wetland park in Chongqing
- Nearly 5,700 residents relocated amid heavy rain in Jizhou, Tianjin
- China to offer nationwide childcare subsidies
- China sees better air, water quality in H1
- Heavy-ion accelerator integrating into cancer treatment in China