Daniel McDowell
March 13, 2012
March 13, 2012
Nobel laureate Robert
Mundell once stated that “great powers have great currencies.” Few geopolitical
observers today would deny that China
has now achieved great power status. Yet, if the overall size of the Chinese
economy, its position as the world’s leading official creditor, its stature as
a powerhouse exporter, and its growing military capacity all support this
claim, the international status of its currency—the yuan, also known as the
renminbi (RMB)—belies it.
Despite China’s
increasingly central position in the global economy over the last decade, the
role of the yuan has so far not followed suit—a direct consequence of Beijing’s
tight control over the currency. However, beginning in 2009, China initiated
steps to promote the internationalization of its currency. Today, Beijing ’s strategy has proven to be incredibly effective
as the use of the yuan outside China ’s
borders has been steadily increasing over the last three years.
Where China has
focused much of its attention, and achieved much of its success to date, is in
the area of yuan-based cross-border trade settlement. The yuan’s growing role
in trade is the result of a carefully executed “two-pronged” strategy led by China ’s central
bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC).
The first prong consists of a pilot
program that allows banks in mainland China
to settle cross border transactions with trading enterprises and investors from
around the world in yuan acquired principally from the growing “offshore”
financial market for the currency in Hong Kong .
In 2009, the pilot program only applied to five Chinese cities; today, there
are no geographic restrictions on the program, meaning banks in any province
can invoice and settle international trade in yuan on behalf of trading
enterprises.
The second prong involves a growing
bilateral central bank currency swap scheme which now includes 17 foreign
partner economies and totals more than RMB 1.2 trillion ($190 billion). Trading enterprises in
partner economies can now obtain yuan via their own central banks to purchase
Chinese imports or they can accept payment in yuan from a Chinese partner in
exchange for their goods and then swap it for their local currency. This
reduces the transaction costs to trade by eliminating the need to rely on a
third-party currency, like the dollar, to complete a deal.
So, how successful has this
two-pronged strategy been to date? In 2009, the first full year with
the PBoC’s new efforts in place, the total volume of yuan based trade reach a
meager RMB 3.6 billion ($570 million). In percentage terms of China ’s total
trade with the world, this amounted to little more than a rounding error.
However, 2010 saw
a substantial uptick in the yuan’s role in China ’s
trade, reaching more than RMB 500 billion ($80 billion) or about 2.7 percent of
China ’s
total trade that year. Last year, as the implementation of
the two-pronged strategy reached further maturity, China’s yuan-based cross-border
trade transactions topped RMB 2 trillion ($267 billion) and accounted for
slightly over 9 percent of Chinese trade in 2011.
Concomitantly, the PBoC has
been successfully promoting yuan-based foreign direct investment (FDI) by
encouraging oversees firms to fund investments in mainland China using RMB,
rather than dollars while also promoting yuan-based outward direct investment
(ODI) by Chinese firms overseas. At year-end 2011, the PBoC reported
more than RMB 90 billion ($14.2 billion) in FDI and RMB 20 billion ($3.16
billion) in ODI, both substantial increases over the previous year.
What does the rise of the
yuan portend for the “almighty” U.S. dollar? Does the emergence of “redback”
onto the international stage presage the greenback’s imminent decline? Should
the American people fear the ascension of “the people’s currency”?
While the growing use of
the yuan in international trade and investment since 2009 is nothing short of
remarkable, the currency still represents only a tiny fraction of global
transactions in these areas. For instance, in 2011, yuan-based trade
settlement represented less than 1 percent of global trade; by comparison, the
dollar is used to settle more than half of international trade transactions.
In cross-border direct investment, the yuan’s role is even more negligible. In
other words, the currency’s gains seem less imposing when put in a global
perspective.
Furthermore, history
suggests that the position of “top currency”, where the dollar sits today, is
an incredibly sticky role. Britain ’s
pound sterling remained the world’s preeminent currency for decades after the U.S. had surpassed the U.K. as the
world’s leading economy. Therefore, it is incredibly unlikely the yuan will
surpass the dollar as the world’s preeminent international currency by the end
of this decade, or even by the end of the next one.
Yet, it is undeniable that
the yuan’s international footprint will continue to expand over the coming
decade. The PBoC is likely to continue signing more central bank swap agreements
with important trading partners, opening the door for more cross-border
yuan-based transactions. Additionally, as the offshore yuan market in Hong Kong continues to develop, the RMB will become an
increasingly important currency in financial markets as well.
The currency is also likely
to play an increasingly important role in official circles as governments seek
to diversify their foreign exchange reserves by adding yuan to the mix. Late
last year, Nigeria
announced it plans to reach a target of holding 10 percent of its
foreign-exchange reserves in yuan as quickly as possible.
Rather than causing
Americans concern, the maturation of the yuan should be viewed as a positive
development for the U.S.
economy. Why? U.S. lawmakers
have been calling for the yuan to appreciate since 2003, arguing that the
currency’s artificially weak exchange rate costs American jobs and contributes
to the large U.S. trade
deficit with China .
Part and parcel to Beijing ’s plans to expand
the yuan’s role in trade, investment, and financial markets is the achievement
of full convertibility, meaning that all restrictions on exchanging RMB for
other currencies will be lifted. China ’s capital account
restrictions have already been reduced as part of the yuan internationalization
strategy, helping the RMB appreciate by more than 22 percent against the dollar
since 2005. Achieving full convertibility will attract further capital inflows
into China
resulting in an even strong yuan. In short, yuan internationalization will bring
about greater balance to the U.S.-China trade relationship.
When this is coupled with
Premier Wen Jiabao’s statement earlier this month that “expanding consumer
demand” is his first priority in 2012, American companies looking to sell their
goods in China ’s
massive market should be especially heartened.
In the coming decade, what
lies ahead for the global monetary system is not a period of wrenching
transition where the global economy ditches the dollar for the yuan, leaving
the American economy in crisis and American economic power in tatters. Rather,
we are embarking on a period where the Chinese currency will assume its
rightful place in the hierarchy of global currencies—among the euro, yen,
pound, and others—but still below the dollar for many years to come.
Americans should not view
the yuan’s rise as a threat to U.S.
economic might; rather it should be understood as an opportunity that will pave
the way for a more balanced relationship between the world’s two economic
superpowers.
Daniel McDowell is a
Bankard Fund for Political Economy Fellow at the University of Virginia .
In the fall of 2012, he will begin an appointment as assistant professor of
political science in the Maxwell School at Syracuse
University .
No comments:
Post a Comment