Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
GUANGZHOU, April 16 (Xinhua) -- Buyers and sellers at
the 105th Canton Fair in south China's Guangdong Province are no longer
restricted to using the U.S. dollar to settle their deals. This year they can
also use the yuan, China's currency.
Last week, the State Council (Cabinet) gave the green
light to five major trade cities -- Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai and
Dongguan -- to use the yuan, also known as Renminbi, as an option to settle
international trade deals.
Last December, pilot programs were announced to allow
the country's two economic powerhouses, Guangdong Province and the Yangtze River
Delta (including Shanghai), to use the yuan to settle trade deals with the two
special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macao.
A similar arrangement has been proposed for exporters
in Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and Yunnan Province in south China, which
will be allowed to use the yuan to settle trade with ASEAN (Association of
Southeast Asian Nations) members starting this year. Details of that program are
yet to be disclosed.
China has also been arranging currency swaps with
trading partners to bypass the U.S. dollars in trade settlements. Since
mid-December, the Chinese mainland has signed currency swap contracts worth 650
billion yuan (95.6 billion U.S. dollars) with central banks in Hong Kong, the
Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Belarus, Indonesia and Argentina.
These swap accords allow other overseas central banks
to sell yuan to local importers who want to buy Chinese goods.
It is believed these moves will benefit manufacturers
and traders at home and abroad by reducing their exposure to exchange-rate
volatility, increasing liquidity in foreign trade and reducing consumer burdens.
At the Canton Fair, which runs from April 15 to May 7
in Guangzhou, the most immediate effect of the trial use of Renminbi will be
lower exchange-rate risks.
Geng Wei, general manager of Shanghai Forever Import
and Export Co., Ltd., which is exhibiting at the fair, said the company was
"willing to settle trade in yuan", as it suffered from exchange-rate
fluctuations in the U.S. dollar and euro last year.
Cui Xiaolong, general manager of Honny Power based in
Dongguan, Guangdong, said that in the second half of last year when exchange
rates fluctuated wildly, a deal with a partner in South Africa, which was agreed
in dollars, was delayed for two months. "The postponement could have been
avoided if yuan were used as the settlement currency," Cui said.
Trade partners of Chinese enterprises would also
benefit from greater use of yuan, said Zhao Jinping, a senior researcher with
the Development Research Center of the State Council.
The regional acceptance of yuan would cut transaction
costs for trade deals with non-U.S. dollar countries and regions, since these
deals bypassed the U.S. dollar, said Zhao.
Datuk Yong Ah Pwi, head of Malaysia-China Chamber of
Commerce, who attended the Canton Fair, said Malaysian companies pinned great
hopes on the use of the yuan with Chinese trading partners.
He said annual bilateral trade between Malaysia and
China had exceeded 50 billion U.S. dollars. Expanding use of Renminbi in trade
settlement between the two economies, which were mutually complementary in
nature, would allow manufacturers from both sides to reduce costs and explore
new trade areas.
Professor Xiao Yao, of the research center of foreign
trade and international economic cooperation under the Guangzhou-based Guangdong
University of Foreign Studies, said, "Along with future world economic recovery,
developed nations are bound to recall a large amount of capital from emerging
markets. Then China will have to depend on itself to maintain sufficient
fluidity.
"The current acceleration of the yuan's international
acceptance will no doubt reduce burdens on China," Xiao predicted.
However, many traders at the Canton Fair reckoned it
would take years to expand the yuan's use.
Denis Keet, general manager of foreign trade division
of Indonesian firm Dyll, said use of the U.S. dollar for trade settlement was a
habit that was difficult to abandon.
He suggested that Chinese traders need to demonstrate
the advantages of using the yuan.

Yuan trade settlement to start in five
Chinese cities
BEIJING, April 9 -- Five major trading cities have got the
nod from the central government to use the yuan in overseas trade settlement -
seen as one more step in China's recent moves to expand the use of its currency
globally.
Shanghai and four cities in the Pearl River
Delta - Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dongguan and Zhuhai - have been designated for the
purpose, said a State Council meeting chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao yesterday.
The Pearl River Delta boasts the country's largest cluster of export-oriented
manufacturing operations. Full story
Expanding use of yuan in Asia and worldwide
BEIJING, April 10 -- While China's proposal for a super-reserve currency did not make tangible progress at the G20 summit, it wasn't meant to.
Instead, it did what it was intended to do: allow China - the largest holder of U.S. debt - to voice unease about U.S. monetary policy. Full story
Yuan's role presents dilemma for
Chinese policymakers
BEIJING, April 8 (Xinhua) -- While China's proposal
for a super-reserve currency did not make tangible progress at the G20 summit,
it wasn't meant to. Instead, it did what it was intended to do: allow China --
the largest holder of U.S. debt -- to voice unease about U.S. monetary policy.
At the G20 meeting, Chinese President Hu Jintao
called for enhanced supervision over major reserve-currency issuing economies
and an overhaul of the international monetary system. Full story
China to make breakthrough in
yuan-based cross-border payment
BEIJING, April 6 (Xinhua) -- China would
manage to make breakthrough in yuan-based cross-border payment system in 2009,
People's Bank of China, or the central bank, said in an on-line report.
According to the report reviewing the country's
payment system in 2008, China would further develop regional and international
cooperation in payments, and improve the yuan-based cross-border trade
settlements this year. Full
story