Europe’s renminbi romance
By Nicola Casarini and Miguel Otero-Iglesias
The Chinese are losing confidence in their currency. Faced with
faltering economic growth, the People’s Bank of China has stepped
up efforts to restore stability to the renminbi, using its vast
foreign reserves to prop up its exchange rate and stem the flow of
funds fleeing the country. The PBOC’s governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, has
repeatedly stated that there is no basis for continued
depreciation, but few in the country seem to be listening. In the
last quarter of 2015 alone, the net capital outflow amounted to
$367 billion.
And yet crumbling confidence within China has not prevented the
West – and Europe in particular – from doubling down on the
currency. When the International Monetary Fund announced in
December that the renminbi would join the US dollar, the British
pound, the euro, and the Japanese yen in the currency basket
underlying its unit of account, the Special Drawing Rights basket,
the decision was clearly political.
Few would argue that the renminbi meets the IMF’s criteria for
inclusion in the SDR currency basket. It is not freely convertible,
and access to it is limited both inside and outside China. Some
foreign branches of Chinese banks offer renminbi-denominated
deposit accounts, and qualified investors can purchase debt
instruments pegged to the currency in mainland China. But the
volume is capped.
To be sure, the renminbi performs well in trade-related statistics.
According to the financial network SWIFT, it is the second most
used currency in trade finance, having overtaken the euro, and
ranks fifth in terms of international payments. These figures are
inflated, however, by transactions with Hong Kong, which accounts
for roughly 70% of international trade payments settled in
renminbi. Vanishingly few contracts are issued in renminbi; the
dollar remains king in invoicing, with the euro a distant second.
Even the shares of the Japanese yen and the British pound, though
very small, are still higher than that of the renminbi.
The IMF’s decision to add the Chinese currency to the SDR basket
owes much to the decision by the United States to defer to Europe.
The US had argued for years that the renminbi should be included in
the SDR only if China opened its capital account, let its currency
float freely, and had a more independent central bank. None of this
has happened.
But after China established the Asian Infrastructure Investment
Bank with the support of Europe, the US agreed to drop its
objections. After all, the SDR basket plays a minor role in global
finance, and admitting the renminbi was seen as a small price to
pay to keep China embedded in the Bretton Woods institutions.
Europe’s investment in the renminbi, however, goes far beyond
political symbolism. The continent’s leaders have been strong
supporters of the internationalization of the renminbi and the
efforts of reform-minded officials such as Zhou. The currency’s
inclusion in the SDR, it is hoped, will encourage China to
liberalize its capital account further.
European governments and central banks are also actively working to
make the renminbi a viable reserve currency, to increase trade with
China. British Chancellor George Osborne has made it clear that he
would like the City of London to be the most important offshore
market for renminbi trading and services. It was no coincidence
that during President Xi Jinping’s state visit to the United
Kingdom in October 2015, China chose London to issue its first
overseas renminbi sovereign debt.
The rest of Europe is equally enthusiastic. Today, the continent is
home to the largest number of renminbi bank clearings. Offshore
renminbi hubs have emerged in Frankfurt, Paris, Milan, Luxemburg,
Prague, and Zurich, and most of Europe’s central banks have added –
or are considering adding – China’s currency to their portfolios.
In October 2013, the PBOC and the European Central Bank signed a
bilateral currency swap agreement for €45 billion ($50 billion),
the largest ever for China outside of Asia.
By propping up the renminbi as a reserve currency, Europe is hoping
to support the liberalizers inside China and welcome the country to
the core group of world powers that decide global monetary affairs.
Unfortunately, however, it is doing so at a time when the renminbi
is under speculative attack and the Chinese themselves are losing
confidence. Europe’s efforts could succeed; but unless China makes
its currency even more widely accessible and opens its market
further, they are almost sure to fail.
Nicola Casarini is Research Head for Asia at the Istituto Affari
Internazionali in Rome. Miguel Otero-Iglesias is Senior Analyst for
the International Political Economy at the Elcano Royal Institute
in Madrid.
Copyright: Project Syndicate:Europe’s Renminbi Romance
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