Yuan reform has little impact on exporters (AFP) Updated: 2005-10-31 20:39
The revaluation of China's currency this year has had minimal impact on the
country's exporters, according to a central bank survey.
A survey showed
that the revaluation of China's currency has had minimal impact on the
country's exporters. [AFP] | "The yuan exchange rate mechanism reform has had little impact on Chinese
traders," the People's Bank of China said in the Financial News, a central bank
publication.
"China's rapid export growth is likely to be maintained," it said Monday.
The study of 2,458 Chinese exporters found that confidence hit a record high
in the third quarter and a further improvement was expected in the current
fourth quarter.
The central bank pushed through a 2.1 percent revaluation of the yuan on July
21 despite opposition from within the government, in particular the Ministry of
Commerce which warned that a stronger currency would hit Chinese exporters.
Exports were up 31.3 percent in the first nine months of the year,
year-on-year, down negligibly from the 32.7 percent growth in the first half.
The survey also found that Chinese residents were selling dollars for yuan
following the July 21 revaluation despite the government's attempts to temper
expectations of further appreciation of the local currency.
The survey found 37 percent of respondents indicated they were selling
dollars, up 2.2 percentage points from the second quarter and 4.4 percentage
points over the same period last year.
That compares with 33.5 percent of people engaged in foreign exchange
transactions who say they saved dollars, which was down 3.4 percentage points
compared with the second quarter and down 5.2 percentage points compared with
the same period last year.
"The confidence among individuals in US dollar-dominated assets has weakened
significantly and the willingness to sell US dollars has grown," the central
bank said.
The bank has raised US dollar deposit interest rates three times, with the
first just moments before the revaluation announcement on July 21, in a bid to
keep money out of yuan assets and so ease pressure on the currency's
value.
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