Tag Archives: IMF

China Voice: SDR entry only a new starting point for RMB globalization

BEIJING, Dec. 2 (Greenpost) — The renminbi’s inclusion into the IMF reserve currency basket known as “Special Drawing Rights” does not mean the internationalization of the Chinese currency is a fait accompli. On the contrary, it only marks a new starting point for the yuan to become a popular global asset.

Amid the joy and excitement following the decision of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to include the RMB in its SDR basket on Tuesday, some people have said entry itself proves the internationalization of the RMB is complete and is now a globally recognized reserve currency.
Much as we hope these people are right, giving the RMB prized reserve asset status does not mean the world’s central banks will immediately make a beeline to invest in the Chinese currency.
Though the RMB has met all the criteria from the IMF to merit a place in its basket, thanks to the Chinese government’s relentless push for its wider use on the global stage, further effort to liberalize the country’s financial market is necessary. Only a commitment to deeper financial reforms will convince the world that holding the RMB is the right choice.
The RMB became the world’s No. 2 currency for global trade finance in 2013. It overtook the Japanese Yen to become the fourth most-used world payment currency in August, only after the U.S. dollar, the euro and the sterling, according to the global transaction services organization SWIFT.
To meet the IMF’s “freely usable” criterion, Chinese authorities undertook a series of reforms in recent months, such as improving its foreign exchange rate system, opening up its interbank bond and forex markets, and improving data transparency by subscribing to the IMF’s Special Data Dissemination Standard (SDDS).
These efforts, often times painful, have paved way for the RMB’s SDR entry. However, it would be naive and potentially troublesome to believe that a currency joining the SDR basket will promise consistent popularity.
Take the yen as an example. Despite its SDR entry, the yen’s share in international reserves has been going down over the past three decades as its prolonged economic recession tarnished the currency’s attraction.
As we celebrate Tuesday’s SDR entry, a milestone for the RMB’s global march, we must take a moment and be clear-eyed about the challenges and responsibilities ahead. Thankfully, China is prepared.
Following the IMF decision, China’s central bank vowed to speed financial reforms and opening up to make positive contributions to global economic growth, financial stability and economic governance.
With China’s commitment to liberalizing interest rates, forex rates, and its capital account, a more liquid, transparent and investor-friendly market can be expected, which will further advance RMB internationalization.  End

Source Xinhua

China to continue to push forward financial reforms after RMB’s SDR inclusion: senior official

WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 (Greenpost) — China will continue to push forward financial reforms after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) decided to include the Chinese currency, the RMB or Chinese yuan, into its Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket of currencies, a senior Chinese official said here Tuesday.

The IMF executive board on Monday approved the inclusion of the RMB into its SDR basket as a fifth currency, along with the U.S. dollar, the euro, the Japanese yen and the British pound, marking a milestone in the RMB’s global march.
“(The) Chinese yuan joining the SDR does not mean (the) end of reform of the financial sector in China,” Chinese Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said at the Washington-D.C.-based Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE).
“(Chinese) President Xi (Jinping) said to the whole nation (that) reform is an ongoing process … We must continue reforms,” Zhu said after delivering a speech on China’s 13th Five-Year Plan, the country’s development blueprint for the next five years (2016-2020).
Zhu said it is in China’s interest to continue pushing forward reforms and the government has been following the financial reform agenda laid out at the Third Plenary Session of the 18th Communist Party of China Central Committee in late 2013. “That’s our guidance. We follow that exactly.”
Zhu said the IMF board’s decision to include the RMB in its SDR basket of currencies really reflects “global consensus” on the RMB’s eligibility of joining the currency basket, and it will make the SDR “more representative and attractive,” benefiting both China and the world.
Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the PIIE and a leading expert on China’s economy, also described the decision as “a win-win for the global economy,” dismissing the speculative view of competition between the RMB and the U.S. dollar.
Lardy said the RMB-denominated assets now account for roughly 1 percent of global reserves held by central banks and the transition to more holdings of RMB-denominated assets will be very gradual.
“It should not be thought of in competitive terms, you know, the Chinese are gaining their share at the expense of the U.S., I think that’s a misreading,” he said.
PIIE President Adam Posen echoed Lardy’s view, saying that “there have been long periods in modern economic history when you have more than one so-called reserve currency.”
“Having a more balanced basket, not just in the SDR but in world portfolios” will help reduce the burden of global imbalances, he said. “I think that’s something the U.S. and China both want.”
Zhu also said the 13th Five-Year Plan is very important for China to complete the building of a moderately prosperous society and overcome the so-called “middle income trap,” as the country is making efforts to restructure the economy and shift to an innovation-driven mode.
He said that the average annual growth rate must be at least 6.5 percent during the next five years for China to double the 2010 GDP and the per capita income of both urban and rural residents by 2020.
Zhu said the main purpose of his trip to Washington this week was to discuss the agenda of the 2016 Group of Twenty (G20) summit with U.S. officials as China formally took over the presidency of the G20 on Tuesday.
Chinese President Xi Jinping and his U.S. counterpart, Barack Obama, gave instructions to working teams of both sides to strengthen coordination in the G20 during their bilateral meeting in Paris one day ago, he said, noting that the two countries displayed “really good policy coordination” in the past ten G20 summits.  Enditem

Source Xinhua

IMF welcomes China’s move to improve forex formation system

WASHINGTON, Aug. 11 (Greenpost) — The International Monetary Fund (IMF) on Tuesday welcomed China’s move to improve its foreign exchange formation system and said a more market-oriented exchange rate would facilitate the Special Drawing Right (SDR) operation if RMB was included in the basket.

POL080415A-A   “The new mechanism for determining the central parity of the RMB announced by the People’s Bank of China (PBC) appears a welcome step as it should allow market forces to have a greater role in determining the exchange rate,” an IMF spokesperson said in a statement on Tuesday.

The spokesperson said that greater exchange rate flexibility is important for China as it strives to give market forces a decisive role in the economy and is rapidly integrating into global financial markets. The IMF also said China has the ability to achieve an effectively floating exchange rate system within two or three years.

In regard to the IMF’s ongoing review on whether RMB will be included in the SDR basket or not, the spokesperson said China’s move has no direct implications for the criteria used in determining the composition of the basket.

But the spokesperson added that a more market-oriented exchange rate would facilitate SDR operation in case the RMB were included in the basket.

The People’s Bank of China on Tuesday announced the decision to improve its central parity system to better reflect market development in the exchange rate between the Chinese yuan against the U.S. dollar. Enditem

Source  Xinhua

Will China’s Renminbi RMB meet IMF criteria?

Interview: China’s financial reform plans sufficient to support RMB’s inclusion into SDR

WASHINGTON, Aug. 5 (Xinhua) — Experts are cautiously optimistic that China’s plans for further financial reforms would be sufficient to help its currency renminbi (RMB) meet the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) criteria for joining its benchmark currency basket later this year.

“I don’t think China is going to do anything radically this year, especially after the stock market correction. But I think China’s own plans for reforms are probably sufficient to include the RMB in SDR (special drawing rights) this year,” David Dollar, senior fellow with the Brookings Institution and former official of the World Bank and the U.S. Treasury Department, told Xinhua in an interview.

Last week, IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde also expressed confidence in China’s financial reforms, saying the recent market turmoil in China wouldn’t derail the IMF’s discussion on whether to include the RMB in its SDR basket.

“We are very comforted by that determination (of Chinese authorities) to deliver on the reforms, which will be conducive, one day, when the times come, once all the signals are checked positively, to the renminbi being included in the special drawing rights basket,” she said.

Earlier this year, Lagarde said the RMB’s inclusion in the SDR basket was not “a matter of if, but when”, and the IMF would work on this with Chinese authorities.

As part of the review process, the Executive Directors of the IMF held an informal meeting last week to discuss a staff report that laid out the initial considerations for reviewing the RMB’s SDR qualifications.

The report, released Tuesday and paved the way for a final decision on the SDR review later this year, hailed China’s progress on the internationalization of the RMB since the last review of the SDR basket in 2010.

“Other currencies have not experienced substantial changes in their relative prominence, underscoring that the rise of the RMB is the most significant development in international currency use since the last review,” the report said. “This notion is also supported by other contextual information such as the rising global network of RMB swap lines and the rapid growth in RMB payments from offshore clearing centers to the Mainland.”

The international use of the RMB is vital for the IMF to decide whether the RMB is a “freely usable” currency, an important criterion for admission into the SDR. At the last IMF review in 2010, the RMB met the export criterion, but was assessed as not meeting the “freely usable” criterion.

“If the RMB were determined to be a freely usable currency, it would play a more central role in the Fund’s financial operations going forward, and it would qualify for inclusion in the SDR basket,” the report said.

Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People’s Bank of China, said in April that China will carry out a series of reforms to further increase the capital account convertibility of RMB, and make the currency more “freely usable”.

Some experts believed that the RMB now meets the requirement of being “freely usable”.

“Since the introduction of a series of domestic reforms aimed at increasing the renminbi’s use in international payments, the currency has become the fifth most used for that purpose, accounting for over 2 percent of such transactions,” Harold James, professor of History and International Affairs at Princeton University, wrote in an article published on the Project Syndicate website, one of the world’s leading op-ed websites.

“That may not seem like a large share, but it is less than one percentage point below that of the Japanese yen,” James said, adding that the IMF should include the RMB and perhaps other emerging-market currencies in its SDR basket, which currently contains only four currencies, namely the U.S. dollar, the euro, the British pound and the Japanese yen.

The IMF staff report didn’t give any indications as to whether the RMB would be put in the SDR basket later this year, but recommended extending the current SDR basket mandate by nine months until September 2016.

The proposed extension, which will be decided by the IMF’s Executive Board later this month, will not “in any way prejudge the timing of conclusion or outcome of the review,” a senior IMF official said in a conference call with reporters on Tuesday, nothing that these two things were not related.

“This was mainly in response to feedback from SDR users” because it’s not easy for them to rebalance their reserve holdings on Jan. 1, 2016, he said, adding that SDR users also need more time to rebalance their positions if a new currency is added to the basket.

The IMF’s Executive Board still plans to formally discuss the RMB’s SDR review toward the end of the year, the official said.

“We still think it is highly likely that RMB will be included — though for technical reasons, the actual date of inclusion may be extended to Sept. 30, 2016, to give reserve managers time to adjust,” Wang Tao, chief China economist at UBS, said in a research note.

While the UK, German and several other European countries have expressed support for adding the RMB into SDR basket this year, the United States, which holds the largest voting share of the IMF, remains cautious.

“The U.S. would like to see more financial reforms in China. Some of these are very basic, like reporting reserves according to IMF standards…I think the U.S. and China should be able to agree on that,” Dollar said, adding that China’s plans for financial reforms “may very well be satisfactory” to the IMF, the U.S. and other shareholders.

“I’m pretty sure the U.S. doesn’t want to be isolated on this. I think the U.S. would work closely with European allies,” Dollar said. “I’m cautiously optimistic we would get good outcome on this.” Enditem