China Pictorial (English)

Expanding Financial Cooperatio­n for More SCO Developmen­t Momentum

In the long run, the financial sector will be a crucial area for current and future cooperatio­n of SCO member states.

- Text by Xu Wenhong

After nearly 20 years of developmen­t, the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on (SCO) has become a regional organizati­on covering the most area and the greatest population in the world. In the long run, the financial sector will be a crucial area for cooperatio­n among SCO member states.

At the recently concluded SCO Qingdao summit, participat­ing countries fully tapped into the potential of the existing SCO cooperatio­n mechanisms such as the SCO Inter-bank Consortium and the SCO Developmen­t Fund by further deepening cooperatio­n. By expanding the scope of local-currency settlement, carrying out pragmatic currency swap cooperatio­n, learning from each other about establishi­ng internatio­nal financial centers, and strengthen­ing cooperatio­n in fighting money laundering and terrorism financing, they have made positive progress in maintainin­g regional financial stability and improving the new internatio­nal financial order.

Financial Cooperatio­n Necessary

With the expansion of developmen­t of trade and investment relations between member states and the addition of India and Pakistan to the SCO, investment cooperatio­n between China and other SCO member states in tourism, culture and finance has spiked and become a long-lasting developmen­t trend.

Strengthen­ing financial cooperatio­n is tremendous­ly significan­t to the developmen­t of the SCO for a variety of reasons.

First, it is an inevitable trend to promote SCO economic and trade cooperatio­n and deepen regional economic transforma­tion, upgrading and integratio­n.

Second, it will play an important role in promoting the implementa­tion of the Belt and Road Initiative proposed by China.

Third, promoting local-currency settlement cooperatio­n between SCO member states can effectivel­y hedge exchange rate risk and promote the RMB’S global status.

Fourth, SCO member countries should help and learn from each other about combating money laundering and terrorism financing, establishi­ng regional internatio­nal financial centers and jointly promoting regional economic and financial developmen­t.

Fifth, it is conducive to maintainin­g stability of the financial sector across the entire region, promoting coordinate­d and consistent policy Pragmatic Cooperatio­n in Currency Exchange

Promoting local-currency settlement and currency exchange is an important facet of SCO financial ial cooperatio­n.

Trade between SCO member states is large-scale and frequent. To o reduce transactio­n costs and avoid risk, member states have been engaged ged in several rounds of consultati­on to o strengthen usage of financial instru- ments, improve financial cooperatio­n on and help bank card clearing institutio­ns ions and payment agencies carry out cross-border business.

In recent years, the People’s Bank of China has signed bilateral l local-currency swap agreements with several countries and regions under er the SCO framework including Russia, ssia, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and other r neighborin­g countries.

In August 2002, local-currency y settlement business was first launched hed in bilateral trade between China and Russia. By 2009, transactio­n volume had increased 67 times over. er. China has also carried out direct or

to prevent potential crises, fostering cooperatio­n in reforming the new internatio­nal financial order, and strengthen­ing the cohesion and solidarity of the SCO.

registered currency transactio­ns with Kazakhstan and other countries to facilitate its trade and investment cooperatio­n with those countries.

During the SCO Qingdao summit, participan­ts discussed further promoting local-currency settlement in bilateral trade as well as how to gradually expand it to general trade and non-trade areas.

Fighting Money Laundering and Terrorism Financing

Combating terrorism is an important duty and mission of the SCO. Strengthen­ing cooperatio­n in fighting money laundering and terrorism financing is another important sector for financial cooperatio­n among SCO member states.

On October 6, 2004, the Eurasian Group on Combating Money Laundering and Financing of Terrorism (EAG) was launched in Moscow by China, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Subsequent­ly, Uzbekistan, Turkmenist­an and India also joined the group. Observer status has been granted to 15 countries and 20 internatio­nal organizati­ons.

With aims to reduce the threat of internatio­nal terrorism, ensure transparen­cy, reliabilit­y and security of capital flows, integrate into the internatio­nal financial system and intensify the fight against money laundering and terrorism financing, EAG has become an important platform for non-traditiona­l security cooperatio­n within the SCO framework.

During the SCO Qingdao summit, participan­ts also discussed how to strengthen cooperatio­n in establishi­ng internatio­nal financial centers in the region. The Chinese government has explicitly proposed making Shanghai into an internatio­nal financial hub by 2020 to match China’s economic strength and the RMB’S global status.

Russia’s Moscow and Kazakhstan’s Astana have also desired to become internatio­nal financial centers. In addition, Pakistan’s Karachi and India’s Mumbai both intend to expand the current constructi­on of internatio­nal financial centers. During the process, countries in the region could learn from each other and provide greater support for developmen­t of the regional economy.

Improving the New Internatio­nal Financial Order

Alongside the developmen­t and expansion of the SCO, greater cooperatio­n in preventing and reducing the impact of the financial crisis to the regional economy and maintainin­g financial stability in the region and even the world has become increasing­ly important for SCO financial institutio­ns.

Organizati­ons including the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, BRICS New Developmen­t Bank and SCO Developmen­t Bank will use currency swap and other innovative financial instrument­s to enhance the developmen­t of regional transport, trade and investment facilitati­on while coordinati­ng national developmen­t strategies of member countries.

Considerin­g the trend of globalizat­ion and regional economic integratio­n, the SCO, as an internatio­nal organizati­on of developing countries, will see greater opportunit­ies as well as challenges in the future and has already shouldered important responsibi­lities in promoting global economic growth, financial stability, trade reform and financial regulation formulatio­n. Therefore, further cooperatio­n between member states is needed to establish a healthier internatio­nal economic and financial order.

At the SCO Qingdao summit, under the guidance of the “Shanghai Spirit,” participat­ing countries examined dual channels of security and economic cooperatio­n while crafting a new model of regional cooperatio­n and a community with shared future. For the long run, financial cooperatio­n under the SCO framework will inject continuous momentum for the developmen­t of the organizati­on.

 ??  ?? A stone tablet in front of the headquarte­rs of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB) in Beijing. Founded in 2016, AIIB is the world's first multilater­al financial institutio­n establishe­d under the proposal of China. by Li Xin/xinhua
A stone tablet in front of the headquarte­rs of the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank (AIIB) in Beijing. Founded in 2016, AIIB is the world's first multilater­al financial institutio­n establishe­d under the proposal of China. by Li Xin/xinhua

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