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BEIJING, Nov. 10 (Xinhuanet) -- The State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) took four measures to tighten the management of foreign exchange inflow, in an effort to supervise and guard against the entering of speculative capital to China, according to the Economic Daily.
First, the paper quoted a SAFE official as saying,
the administration will gradually establish a framework to balance theinflow and
outflow of foreign exchanges,
The framework should satisfy the rational and legal
demand of foreign exchanges and simplify their circulation procedures, and, with
greater selectivity in the management system, could prevent inflow of
speculative foreign exchanges.
Second, in response to the relatively rapid growth of
China's foreign debt in recent years, especially short-term debt, SAFE
hasstrengthened supervision of the lending of foreign-funded banks and
foreign-funded enterprises and encouraged them to replace short-term debts with
long-term ones to improve the term structureof China's foreign debts.
Third, SAFE strengthened auditing during the
settlement of foreign exchanges to ensure the authenticity of the settlement.
This has proven to be a key measure to prevent possible impact by short-term
flow of capital.
For the settlement of more than 200,000 US dollars of
capital or foreign exchanges by foreign-funded companies, the companies should
be able to prove their actual paying demand by RMB and makeclear that the
settlement of foreign exchanges would not be used to pay the RMB loans.
Settlement of over 50,000 US dollars of foreign
exchanges by individuals is required to be approved by departments in charge
offoreign exchanges.
Fourth, China urges the designated banks doing
foreign exchangeservices to perform the supervision duties, so as to gradually
shift the government's management of foreign exchange from direct administration
to indirect supervision.
It will to a large extent depend on the banks to
implement the above-mentioned measures, so SAFE would supervise and urge the
banks to fulfill their duties mainly through business guidance andafter-action
inspections, said the paper. Enditem |