Sino-Singapore Jingwei, January 12th (Wei Wei intern Gao Xuan) Two more vice presidents of state-owned banks moved to the local area.

On the 9th, the 37th meeting of the Standing Committee of the 13th Henan Provincial People's Congress decided to appoint Zhang Min as the deputy governor of the Henan Provincial People's Government.

Zhang Min was previously the vice president of China Construction Bank (hereinafter referred to as CCB).

  On the 11th, the Standing Committee of the Hainan Provincial People's Congress announced the appointment and dismissal list, and decided to appoint Chen Huaiyu as the vice governor of the Hainan Provincial People's Government.

Chen Huaiyu is from the Bank of China (hereinafter referred to as the Bank of China), and was previously the vice president of the bank.

  In recent years, more and more cadres in the financial field have entered the local party and government systems. Most of them have been directly transferred from the National People's Congress and state-owned banks to deputy positions of provincial governments. They are also called "deputy governors of finance" by the outside world.

According to incomplete statistics from Sino-Singapore Jingwei, as of January 12, there were 16 "deputy governors of finance" across the country.

"Post-70s" banker served as "Vice Governor of Finance"

  According to the resume, Zhang Min was born in 1970. He is a senior accountant. From September 1988 to July 1992, he studied in East China Institute of Technology, majoring in accounting. In July 1996, he graduated from Shaanxi University of Finance and Economics, majoring in accounting, and received a master's degree in economics. ; In July 2013, he graduated from Xi'an Jiaotong University majoring in Applied Economics and received a Ph.D. in Economics.

  Zhang Min has worked in CCB for more than 26 years. In the early days, he served as assistant to the president of CCB Shaanxi Branch, general manager of the accounting and settlement department, general manager of the accounting department, director of the treasury management center, and president of the Xi'an Xingqing Road Sub-branch.

From July 2013 to November 2015, he served as vice president of CCB Shaanxi Branch, from November 2015 to December 2016, he served as vice president of CCB Hubei Branch, and from March 2017 to July 2018, he served as CCB Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region Branch President, served as President of CCB Tianjin Branch from July 2018 to November 2020, and served as Vice President of CCB since December 2020.

  During his tenure as vice president of CCB, Zhang Min was mainly in charge of financial technology, channel operations and other lines.

In March 2022, at the CCB 2021 performance conference, Zhang Min said that CCB's financial technology investment in 2021 will reach 23.58 billion yuan, a year-on-year increase of 6.6%.

In the future, CCB will continue to maintain a steady growth in financial technology investment, while continuing to enrich the financial technology talent team, and strengthen infrastructure construction and R&D investment.

  Another "Vice Governor of Finance" Chen Huaiyu is from the Bank of China.

According to public information, Chen Huaiyu was born in 1970, graduated from Beijing Foreign Studies University in 1992, and graduated from University of International Business and Economics in 1999 with a master's degree in economics.

In 1997, Chen Huaiyu joined the Bank of China.

He has successively served as assistant to the president and credit risk director of Guangdong Branch of Bank of China, executive deputy general manager, general manager and executive director of Bank of China (Hungary) Co., Ltd., and president of Hungary Branch of Bank of China.

  From November 2017 to February 2021, Chen Huaiyu served as President of Bank of China Sydney Branch, Director of Bank of China (Australia) Limited, and Director of Bank of China (New Zealand) Limited.

Since April 2021, Chen Huaiyu has been the vice president of the Bank of China, and it has been less than two years.

  Chen Huaiyu has more than 25 years of experience in the Bank of China, and has experienced experience in many branches of the Bank of China at home and abroad.

Today, Hainan continues to expand the opening up of the financial industry internally and externally, accelerate financial reform and innovation, and initially establish a financial system compatible with a high-level free trade port by 2025. The requirements also match Chen Huaiyu's domestic and foreign financial work experience.

There are 16 "deputy governors of finance"

  In recent years, "deputy governor of finance" has become a high-frequency vocabulary.

According to incomplete statistics from Sino-Singapore Jingwei, as of January 12, if Zhang Min and Chen Huaiyu, who were officially announced this time, are counted, 16 provinces (autonomous regions and municipalities directly under the central government) across the country have been equipped with "deputy governors of finance".

Judging from their resumes, most of them come from the five major state-owned banks, policy banks and financial regulatory agencies.

  After further analysis, it can be found that among the 16 people, there are 12 "deputy governors of finance" from the banking system, most of whom are executives of the five major banks.

Among them, 5 people have work experience in Agricultural Bank of China (hereinafter referred to as Agricultural Bank of China) and China Construction Bank, 3 people have work experience in Bank of China, and 3 people have work experience in Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (hereinafter referred to as ICBC) and China Development Bank (hereinafter referred to as China Development Bank). There are 2 people.

  Among them, some have gradually grown up in a banking system, and some have working experience in multiple banks.

The former, such as Wang Hao, vice governor of Yunnan Province, has been working in CCB since July 1993 after graduating from Southwestern University of Finance and Economics.

  For example, Cai Dong, executive vice governor of Jilin Province, worked in ICBC, China Development Bank and Agricultural Bank of China, and served as vice president of Agricultural Bank of China before becoming vice governor; Before becoming the vice-governor of Fujian Province, the last stop in a financial institution was also the Agricultural Bank of China.

  In addition, there are four "deputy governors of finance" whose resumes are mainly concentrated in financial regulatory agencies. For example, Wu Qing, the executive deputy mayor of Shanghai, once served in the securities regulatory system, and Zhang Xin, the vice governor of Guangdong Province, served in the securities regulatory commission, the People's Bank of China, and the State Foreign Exchange. Authority worked.

  According to previous media reports, whether it is local economic development or preventing and defusing risks, the comprehensive coordination of the two cannot be separated from finance.

Most of the cadres who grew up in big banks and financial supervision departments have excellent political literacy and strong professional ability, so they are naturally suitable candidates for the deputy governor of finance.

  Pan Helin, co-director and researcher of the Digital Economy and Financial Innovation Research Center of Zhejiang University International Joint Business School, said in an interview with Sino-Singapore Jingwei that the function of finance is to allocate resources. Executives in the banking industry themselves bring their own financial resources. Financial support, so the vice-governor of finance is popular because governments around the world have needs for finance.

This includes the needs of enterprises in various places for finance, which needs to be invigorated to help enterprises, and also the needs of governments in various places. Only by understanding finance can we invigorate the local economy and raise more funds for local infrastructure construction.

(The opinions in this article are for reference only and do not constitute investment advice. Investment is risky, and you need to be cautious when entering the market.)