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Asian nations [ASEAN+3] to consider adding yuan, yen to regional swap deal: Nikkei

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Asian nations to consider adding yuan, yen to regional swap deal: Nikkei

CGTN - 03-May-2019


1355c138ea394d3386543cb6e46225f9.jpg


Asian finance leaders agreed to consider adding the Chinese yuan and the Japanese yen to their multilateral currency swap arrangement to ramp up their firepower to deal with potential financial crises, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Friday.

The addition of local currencies to the swap deal, known as the Chiang Mai Initiative, “maybe one enhancement option,” the finance ministers and central bank governors of Japan, China, South Korea and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) said in a joint statement on Thursday, the Nikkei reported.

Such a move would help alleviate concerns held by some Asian economies over the swap arrangement's reliance on the dollar. It would also build stronger buffers for emerging economies in the region, which are vulnerable to market turbulence caused by monetary policy shifts by the U.S. and other major central banks.

Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso told a news conference that it was important that countries receiving support be able to choose the currency they want, the Nikkei said.

People's Bank of China Deputy Governor Chen Yulu was quoted as saying that introducing local currencies spread out the risk of relying on a single currency for swap arrangements. Beijing has been promoting the yuan for trade, but wider use of the currency has been hindered because it is not fully convertible.

The finance leaders of Japan, China, South Korea and ASEAN – together known as ASEAN plus 3 – met in Fiji on the sidelines of the annual meeting of the Asian Development Bank.

Created in 2000 after the Asian financial crisis in 1997, the Chiang Mai Initiative is a multilateral currency swap arrangement under which member nations facing capital flight can access a pool of dollars in exchange for their currencies. The size of its safety net was doubled to 240 billion U.S. dollars in 2014.

https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d514e324d444e34457a6333566d54/index.html

@Chinese-Dragon , @Nan Yang , @Dungeness , @oprih , @rambro , @powastick , @TANAHH , @AViet , @sinait
 
Asian nations to consider adding yuan, yen to regional swap deal: Nikkei

CGTN - 03-May-2019


1355c138ea394d3386543cb6e46225f9.jpg


Asian finance leaders agreed to consider adding the Chinese yuan and the Japanese yen to their multilateral currency swap arrangement to ramp up their firepower to deal with potential financial crises, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Friday.

The addition of local currencies to the swap deal, known as the Chiang Mai Initiative, “maybe one enhancement option,” the finance ministers and central bank governors of Japan, China, South Korea and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) said in a joint statement on Thursday, the Nikkei reported.

Such a move would help alleviate concerns held by some Asian economies over the swap arrangement's reliance on the dollar. It would also build stronger buffers for emerging economies in the region, which are vulnerable to market turbulence caused by monetary policy shifts by the U.S. and other major central banks.

Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso told a news conference that it was important that countries receiving support be able to choose the currency they want, the Nikkei said.

People's Bank of China Deputy Governor Chen Yulu was quoted as saying that introducing local currencies spread out the risk of relying on a single currency for swap arrangements. Beijing has been promoting the yuan for trade, but wider use of the currency has been hindered because it is not fully convertible.

The finance leaders of Japan, China, South Korea and ASEAN – together known as ASEAN plus 3 – met in Fiji on the sidelines of the annual meeting of the Asian Development Bank.

Created in 2000 after the Asian financial crisis in 1997, the Chiang Mai Initiative is a multilateral currency swap arrangement under which member nations facing capital flight can access a pool of dollars in exchange for their currencies. The size of its safety net was doubled to 240 billion U.S. dollars in 2014.

https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d514e324d444e34457a6333566d54/index.html

@Chinese-Dragon , @Nan Yang , @Dungeness , @oprih , @rambro , @powastick , @TANAHH , @AViet , @sinait
Keyword here is "market turbulence caused by monetary policy shifts by the U.S."
A responsible monetary policy by the U.S. is essential to the health of the global economy.
Unfortunately that is NOT TO BE.
Dumping of the US$ will be sooner rather than later.
.
 
Keyword here is "market turbulence caused by monetary policy shifts by the U.S."
A responsible monetary policy by the U.S. is essential to the health of the global economy.
Unfortunately that is NOT TO BE.
Dumping of the US$ will be sooner rather than later.
.

I think those old enough still have the very bitter memory of the 1997 crisis and the way the US torpedoed Asian economies.

CMI (and CMIM) is the product of that bitter experience (along with ASEAN+3). Interestingly, East Asians cannot initiate regional institutions on their own accord; there should always be some external shock.

Today the reason SK is pushing so hard for a CJK FTA is also externally-informed. Probably, the eventual ASEAN+FTA (EAFTA), too, will be similar.
 

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