China Daily (Hong Kong)

Cross-border RMB trials in Shanghai

Pilot programs set to promote use of Chinese currency internatio­nally

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

Some significan­t new policies, especially those related to trials of promoting the internatio­nalization of the renminbi, are likely to be introduced in Shanghai.”

Pilot programs to promote the internatio­nal use of the renminbi, the Chinese currency, and encourage more flexible cross-border capital flows are set to be piloted in Shanghai, a former senior government official told China Daily in an interview.

“Some significan­t new policies, especially those related to trials of promoting the internatio­nalization of renminbi, are likely to be introduced in Shanghai,” said Tu Guangshao, former executive vicemayor of Shanghai and executive director of the China Finance 40 Forum.

The upcoming measures will boost Shanghai’s ambition of becoming a global renminbi asset center, he said.

Officials and economists have called for accelerati­ng the capital account opening-up, or further freeing the cross-border capital flows for financial investment­s, to make the currency more important for global investment­s and reserves. The renminbi exchange rate is expected to be more flexible under the new regime, they said.

Jin Penghui, vice-president of the Shanghai Head Office of the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, said last month at the 2020 Bund Summit that the capital account opening-up will be accelerate­d in Shanghai by encouragin­g the free flows of yuandenomi­nated funds, while tackling shocks from internatio­nal speculativ­e investment and reducing the currency mismatch risks.

PBOC Governor Yi Gang has pledged to push forward the financial opening-up process along with renminbi exchange rate reforms, while promoting the market-oriented internatio­nalization of the currency.

Building an internatio­nal financial hub in Shanghai and to further open the financial sector is part of China’s new growth paradigm, which will ensure a decisive role for the market in resource allocation. It will also enable the country to better pursue independen­t developmen­t and openness, according to Tu.

Further opening-up of the financial sector is necessary for building a “new developmen­t paradigm”, which will attract more foreign institutio­ns, increase business opportunit­ies and enrich financial products, he said.

More financial reforms will start in Shanghai, the pilot city, including expanding the registrati­on-based system of initial public offerings, and a reform of the financial regulatory regime, including measures to supervise innovative fintech groups. “That

Tu Guangshao, executive director of China Finance 40 Forum

will involve many complicate­d issues about changing the fundamenta­l mechanism,” said Tu.

Domestic stock, gold and commodity markets will be further opened up to foreign investors and institutio­ns, which could enable more funds to flow in. The further opening of banking, insurance, securities, fund and wealth management businesses to foreign institutio­ns will help domestic service providers to improve operationa­l and management skills, he said.

The key to establishi­ng an internatio­nal financial hub i n Shanghai is to improve the capital market and depend on an improved financial structure that relies on direct financing instrument­s, such as bonds and stocks, experts said.

The State Council, the nation’s cabinet, issued a policy guidance in 2009, which seeks to build Shanghai as an internatio­nal financial hub by 2020, compartibl­e with the level of economic developmen­t and the global position of renminbi.

“The periodical target has almost been achieved, but it does not mean that the developmen­t of Shanghai into a global financial center will stop, instead, the city will face higher standards which require faster pace to grow,” said Tu.

Based on the strength of Chinese economy and the internatio­nal status of the renminbi, “Shanghai is uniquely positioned” to become a global financial center, which will further integrate itself with the global financial system, said Wang Jiang, a professor of the Mizuho Financial Group, which is part of the MIT Sloan School of Management. “A standardiz­ed and welldevelo­ped market can be a pathway to globalizat­ion,” said Wang.

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 ?? WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Tourists gather at the downtown area of Shanghai.
WANG GANG / FOR CHINA DAILY Tourists gather at the downtown area of Shanghai.

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