IMF approves China’s yuan as elite reserve currency

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The International Monetary Fund admitted the yuan into the SDR basket of currencies on Monday and the People’s Bank of China has pledged to keep the currency stable as it vies to be a major economic player.
The International Monetary Fund on Monday (Nov 30) admitted China's yuan into its benchmark currency basket. PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The International Monetary Fund welcomed China's yuan into its elite reserve currency basket on Monday (Nov 30), recognising the ascendance of the Asian power in the global economy.

The yuan, also known as the renminbi, will join the US dollar, euro, Japanese yen and British pound next year in the basket of currencies the IMF uses as an international reserve asset.

IMF managing director Christine Lagarde called the decision "an important milestone in the integration of the Chinese economy into the global financial system."

"It is also a recognition of the progress that the Chinese authorities have made in the past years in reforming China's monetary and financial systems."

The decision by the IMF executive board solidifies China's ambition to see the government-controlled yuan achieve global status as one of the world's top currencies alongside the United States, Europe and Japan.

China, the world's second-largest economy, asked last year for the yuan to be added to the Fund's Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket. But, while already meeting the SDR criteria for being widely used, as recently as August the Fund considered the currency too tightly controlled to qualify.

However, IMF staff experts in early November said that Beijing had taken the steps necessary for the yuan to be called "freely usable", opening the way for Monday's decision.

Ms Lagarde said the yuan's inclusion in the basket was expected to help China open up further to the world economy. "The continuation and deepening of these efforts will bring about a more robust international monetary and financial system, which in turn will support the growth and stability of China and the global economy," she said.

The unexpected devaluation of the yuan last August received good marks from the IMF as it expanded the currency's movements based on market forces.

In addition, Beijing last Wednesday announced that an initial group of foreign central banks has been allowed to enter the Chinese currency market, which likely will promote further internationalisation of the yuan in global trading.

IMF members can use the Special Drawing Rights basket to obtain currencies to meet balance-of-payments needs. The Fund also issues its crisis loans - crucial to struggling economies like Greece - valued in SDRs.

The yuan's entry into the basket takes effect on Oct 1, 2016.

But China is expected to face challenges with the yuan included as an IMF reserve currency. It puts the Bank of China under pressure to provide more transparency in line with its peers, such as the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank.

"If part of their policy is to gradually liberalise the capital account and the financial sector, this is setting in motion a process of opening up that cannot be reversed," Mr Angel Udibe, a financial markets expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told AFP.

"It really make the case at home that they need to continue with the process of liberalisation."

The composition and weightings of the SDRs basket are reviewed every five years. The last time the currencies in the basket were changed was in 2000, when the euro replaced the German deutschemark and the French franc.

The value of the SDR is based on a weighted average of the currencies in the basket. With the inclusion of the yuan, the US dollar's weight in the new basket will be little changed from its current 41.7 per cent. The euro will be 30.9 per cent, the yuan 10.9 per cent, the yen 8.3 per cent, and the pound 8.1 per cent.

The inclusion of the yuan came with the support of the United States, the IMF's largest shareholder. Until recently Washington had accused China of keeping the yuan artificially low to gain a trade advantage.

But in October, the US Treasury Department softened its tone, saying that after Beijing's moves to loosen controls, the yuan "remains below its appropriate medium-term valuation".

Still, the IMF decision risks angering some lawmakers in the US Congress amid fierce manoeuvering for the 2016 presidential election.

"With this decision, the IMF is choosing to reward China's currency manipulation instead of combatting it," said Senator Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat and long-time China critic.

"This decision is an affront to the millions of US workers who have lost their jobs at the hands of China's rapacious trading practices, and sends a terrible signal to the rest of the world that currency manipulation is acceptable behaviour in the eyes of the IMF."

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