The yuan has fallen sharply against the US dollar as investors take their money out of China.

The yuan has fallen sharply against the US dollar as investors take their money out of China.Credit:AP

The scheme,developed by the BIS and People’s Bank of China (PBOC),would enable the participating banks to draw on the pool and additional BIS funding during any future periods of market volatility.

Those signing up for the scheme alongside the PBOC include Bank Indonesia,the Central Bank of Malaysia,the Hong Kong Monetary Authority,the Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Central Bank of Chile. The scheme is open to other banks in the region.

Each of the central banks will contribute at least 15 billion yuan or its US dollar equivalent – about $US2.2 billion ($3.2 billion) – to the pool,which the PBOC said would help meet international demand for the yuan/renminbi and “contribute to regional financial security.”

For many years China has been trying to promote increased international use of its currency and to reduce its exposure to the US dollar and the threat the dollar’s dominance of international trade,central bank reserves and the global financial system might pose to its own interests.

China wants to promote the yuan as a new anchor currency in Asia and other small regional blocs with no great affection for US dollar dominance.

Its awareness of the significance of that threat and its own vulnerability can only have been heightened by the financial sanctions the Westhas imposed on Russia for its invasion of Ukraine,which included the freezing of almost half Russia’s foreign exchange reserves and the booting of Russiaout of the global SWIFT financial messaging service that underpins almost all international financial transactions.

It is the dollar’s dominance that enabled the US,supported by the Europeans,to impose sanctions that had previously only been deployed against regimes like North Korea,Iran and,after the US withdrawal,the Taliban regime in Afghanistan. The US effectivelyshut Russia out of the global financial system.

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If China,and others,needed a wake-up call that was it. It would have been immediately obvious to China that it would be hit with the same sanctions should it want to progress its ambitions towards Taiwan.

It’s not just the brutal demonstration of the power the role the dollar plays within the global financial system or its own ambition of challenging US hegemony that would provide motivation for China to try to promote its own currency.

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The dollar’s centrality within the global economy means that US economic and monetary policies also play an outsized role in the global economy. The Federal Reserve’s decisions on interest rates and the availability of credit have flow-on effects to other economies and financial systems.

With the Fed now raising rates and withdrawing liquidity from the US economy,even as China is trying to stimulate its flagging growth rate,a divergence of monetary policies and interest rates is occurring that,with capital already flowing out of China towards the rising rates in the US,has the potential to override China’s policies and destabilise its economy,or at least force it to take decisions it would otherwise not have made.

That’s not a comfortable position,particularly for a country with its own hegemonic ambitions.
China had already taken some small steps to putting in place the foundations for positioning the yuan as a meaningful alternative to the dollar.

For well over a decade it has been negotiating currency swap deals with other central banks to facilitate the direct use of its currency in trade that more commonly is denominated in US dollars.

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It created its own version of SWIFT,the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System,in 2015 to facilitate cross-border renminbi-denominated trade settlements,lobbied successfully to have the yuan included in the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights basket of currency reserves and,more recently,developed a digital version of its currency.

It has been piloting yuan-denominated oil deals with Saudi Arabia,trying to negotiate iron ore purchases in yuan and,more recently,for obvious reasons,has been settling deals with Russia in yuan and roubles.

Despite those efforts,the yuan is still only used in just over two per cent of global payments. The US dollar is used in about 42 per cent of global payments. It is the currency for nearly three-quarters of trade in the Asia-Pacific. Two-thirds of global securities issuance is in dollars and about 60 per cent of foreign exchange reserves.

China is slowly putting together the architecture,infrastructure and relationships to build,not a global challenger to US dollar primacy at this stage,but a regional one.

The power of the US dollar has been on show with Western sanctions effectively shutting Russia out of the global financial system.

The power of the US dollar has been on show with Western sanctions effectively shutting Russia out of the global financial system.Credit:AP

It’s taking a long and incremental approach to its ambitions for the yuan and its own financial security and is focusing on its sphere of interest in the Asia-Pacific and the developing economies where its Belt and Road program provide it with both influence and leverage. A number of African countries,for instance,have begun settling payments in yuan and holding yuan within their currency reserves.

China wants to promote the yuan as a new anchor currency in Asia and other small regional blocs with no great affection for US dollar dominance. Its efforts can only have intensified after the demonstration of the dollar’s hegemony in the American response to the invasion of Ukraine.

Its ambitions are necessarily constrained by its own system and the Communist Party’s obsession with control over every aspect of its society and economy.

The dollar’s role in the global economy and financial system flows from the depth and liquidity of its financial markets,the strength of the regulation of those markets,the transparency of its judicial system,the size of its economy and fact that its central bank is at arms’ length from its political class. The currency is freely floating and fully and readily convertible.

China doesn’t have fully developed financial markets. It has capital controls. The yuan isn’t free-floating or fully convertible and isn’t driven primarily by market forces. Its regulation and judicial systems are opaque and untrusted by Westerners. The PBOC will do what the party directs.

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Some of those things might be changeable at the margin – China has been trying to open up its financial markets – but more complete liberalisation is inconceivable and therefore China’s international ambitions for the yuan are constrained by its domestic policies and priorities.

At this point it is seeking to shave slivers off dollar dominance and fragment it over time rather than displace it. China does,of course,take a long view of history.

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