Who Really Controls China’s Financial System: PBOC, NFRA, and CSRC
China’s financial system is overseen by three national bodies under the State Council: the People’s Bank of China, the National Financial Regulatory Administration, and the China Securities Regulatory Commission. A Party-level Central Financial Commission sits above them for coordination.
The three pillars
Start with the top of the structure. The State Council (国务院) is the highest administrative body, and three specialized financial regulators sit directly under it. Each owns a defined perimeter, and reading any Chinese market move starts with knowing which of the three holds the pen.
PBOC. The People’s Bank of China is the central bank. Since the 2023 restructuring it has narrowed toward monetary-policy formulation and macroprudential management, and it continues to oversee the interbank bond market and the payment and clearing systems (PBOC). Foreign-exchange management runs through the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, which sits under the PBOC.
NFRA. The National Financial Regulatory Administration was established in March 2023 and replaced the former China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission. It supervises the entire financial industry except securities, covering banks, insurers, trusts, financial-leasing and asset-management companies, consumer-finance firms, and financial holding companies, and it now holds financial-consumer protection (NFRA).
CSRC. The China Securities Regulatory Commission, established in 1992, regulates the securities industry: listed companies, securities firms, fund managers, and the exchanges. In October 2023 enterprise-bond supervision moved to the CSRC from the National Development and Reform Commission, consolidating corporate and enterprise bonds under one regulator (CSRC).
What the 2023 restructuring moved
The 2023 reform consolidated supervision that had been split. Oversight of financial holding companies and financial-consumer protection moved from the PBOC to the NFRA, and the PBOC stepped back toward its core monetary and macroprudential mandate (NFRA). At the Party level, a Central Financial Commission was established for top-level coordination, and the secretariat of the former Financial Stability and Development Committee was folded into its office.
Where the framework is heading
On 20 March 2026 the Ministry of Justice, together with the PBOC, NFRA, CSRC, and SAFE, released the Financial Law of the People’s Republic of China (Draft) for public comment through 19 April 2026. The draft runs eleven chapters and ninety-five articles and moves the system from sector-by-sector rules toward a unified financial law, consolidating the PBOC’s statutory functions and framing the system within high-quality financial development (MOJ, public comment). Under this page’s Living Document standard, the draft’s progress is the kind of change that updates the audit stamp above.
The PBOC sets the policy rate and steers liquidity through its own toolkit. That transmission runs through a separate channel.
Read the mechanism: How the PBOC runs monetary policy →Sources, dated by audit: regulator perimeters and mandates per the 2023 State Council institutional restructuring and the public materials of the NFRA, the CSRC, and the PBOC; the Financial Law (Draft) per the Ministry of Justice public-comment release of 20 March 2026.