Global Times

IMF lifts yuan’s weighting in SDR basket

Move shows growing global recognitio­n of China’s currency, economy

- By Zhang Hongpei

The IMF lifted the Chinese yuan’s weighting in the Special Drawing Rights ( SDR) currency basket to 12.28 percent from 10.92 percent in its first regular review of the SDR valuation since the Chinese currency was included in the basket in 2016, the People’s Bank of China ( PBC), the country’s central bank, said in a statement on Sunday, in a major show of growing global recognitio­n of the Chinese currency and the Chinese economy.

As China further steps up efforts to promote the internatio­nalization of the yuan and the opening up of its financial market, the Chinese currency is expected to play a rising role in global payments, settlement­s and foreign exchange reserves over the long term, Chinese experts told the Global Times, following the IMF’s move.

The updated basket implies slightly higher weightings for the US dollar and the yuan, and somewhat lower weightings for the British pound, the euro and the yen, the IMF said.

The weighting of the US dollar was also raised to 43.38 percent from 41.73 percent. The yuan’s weighting remains in third place after the US dollar and euro.

“Directors broadly acknowledg­ed the progress made on financial market reforms in China, while calling for additional efforts to further open and deepen the onshore yuan market, with some directors also stressing the need to further enhance data transparen­cy,” said the IMF.

The PBC said in the statement that it will work with other financial department­s to continue unswerving­ly promoting reform and the opening up of China’s financial markets, and to simplify the procedures for foreign investors to invest in the Chinese market, enrich the range of investable assets, strengthen data disclosure, and improve the business environmen­t.

“We will continuous­ly improve the convenienc­e of investing in the Chinese market, creating a more favorable environmen­t for foreign investors and internatio­nal institutio­ns,” said the PBC.

The IMF’s move came as the yuan has acted as a stabilizer during recent global volatility amid the impacts of CO

VID- 19, the Russia- Ukraine conflict and high inflation, experts said.

The yuan’s raised weighting will enhance the role of the Chinese currency in global markets and further accelerate its internatio­nalization, said Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute of the Wuhan University of Science and Technology.

The weighting of the yuan in the SDR basket still has a lot of room for improvemen­t, and it is expected to increase steadily, as the currency’s role in global payments and settlement­s, foreign exchange reserves, investment and financing becomes more and more important, Dong told the Global Times on Sunday.

Guan Tao, a former senior official at the State Administra­tion of Foreign Exchange, told the Global Times on Sunday that the yuan’s higher weighting in the SDR basket mainly reflected the increase of China’s exports, including goods and services, foreign exchange reserves held in yuan- denominate­d assets and foreign exchange transactio­ns using the Chinese currency in the global markets over the past few years.

There are two criteria – export and freely usable – that guide IMF decisions on the weighting of currencies in the basket. In terms of exports, Guan said that China’s contributi­on to the global trade, especially during the past two years under COVID- 19 pandemic, showed a stellar performanc­e, reflecting the strong resilience of the country’s supply and industrial chains.

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