Opinion
         
 

Stable yuan permits decisive reforms
 Updated: 2004-01-15 08:48

People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said early this week that, as he observed, the upward pressure on the renminbi exchange rate with the US dollar has been tapering off in the last few weeks.

If true, that would be cause for optimism for China since a stable currency rate will lay the necessary the groundwork for it to carry out its market-oriented reforms, especially that for its still largely State-owned banking industry.

Zhou, governor of the Chinese central bank, attributed the favourable turn to China's improved trade balance and the global economic situation.

Massive purchases by three Chinese trade commissions to the United States since last November not only reduced the later's trade deficit but also demonstrated China's sincerity to pursue trade balance. Despite the continuing complaint from the US side, those purchases are the best that China can do other than plunging into the uncharted waters of free currency conversion before its own banking system is ready.

Meanwhile, recovery of the US economy in the last quarter of 2003 heralds a brighter prospect for the world economy in 2004.

In retrospect, China charted a difficult course in 2003 between the risk of a slowdown of export growth and the danger of an explosion of disputes with its trade partners.

However, if the expected 8.5 per cent gross domestic product growth in 2003 was testimony to the country's success in surviving the outbreak of SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome).

Thanks to its insistence on the yuan's valuation against the US dollar, the country's foreign trade volume soared by 37.1 per cent to US$851.2 billion in 2003, making it the fourth largest trader in the world.

Contrary to some Western politicians"criticism that China is grabbing jobs from their countries, a robust Chinese economy is a great support to the world business as its appetite for imports has passed from forecast to fact. Its 2003 imports increased by almost 40 per cent over the previous year.

However, as the world business is beginning to show signs of recovery now, there is no point to believe the trend to be able to sustain itself, and that the world could sail into a boom cycle without China's contribution, in trade and in investment.

On China's part, whether or not the world is in recovery, and whether or not there is criticism of its renminbi policy from the Western countries, it must pursue its banking and financial reform, and its own timetable of foreign exchange liberalization.

And most likely, both the international pressure for renminbi revaluation and the domestic pressure for higher quality in banking services will conspire to drive the reform to proceed more quickly than ever.

The Chinese authorities are fully aware of the necessity to ultimately float the nation's currency if the country is to fully integrate its market into the world economy.

The central bank governor's comments should not be deemed merely as a sign of relief or complacency.


(China Daily)



 
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