BEIJING - China
China is struggling to reconcile its push
for economic reforms and a freely traded currency with curbing massive outflows
of capital sparked by worries over its slowing economy — and a lack of
communication is fueling fear.
The thorny problem represents the so-called “impossible
trinity”, as China’s ruling Communist Party seeks to control the exchange rate
and monetary policy, while at the same time moving to freer capital flows,
analysts said.
Around $1.0 trillion left China last year, according to
Bloomberg Intelligence. In December alone capital outflow from the country was
nearly $160 billion, it said.
The cash hemorrhage reflects growing concern about the
economy against a backdrop of volatility in the stock and currency markets,
which has led both investors and savers to shed their yuan, also known as the
renminbi (RMB).
“The recent flood of capital leaving China has been driven
primarily by increased skepticism that the People’s Bank (the central bank)
will hold to its pledge to keep the renminbi stable,” said Mark Williams, chief
Asia economist at Capital Economics.
At the recent World Economic Forum in Davos, billionaire
investor George Soros told Bloomberg TV that the world’s second largest
economy, where growth has already slowed to a 25-year low, was heading for more
trouble.
“A hard landing is
practically unavoidable,” he said, pointing to deflation and excessive debt as
a reason for China’s slowdown.
His remarks angered the Chinese media, which accused him of
“declaring war” on the currency.
Soros — whose enormous trades are still blamed in some
countries for contributing to the Asian financial crisis of 1997 — in the 1990s
led speculators in bets against the Bank of England, which unsuccessfully
sought to defend the pound’s exchange rate peg.
No policy to devalue
The yuan has retreated against the dollar by 1.3 percent
since the start of January, having already slid more than 4.5 percent against
the greenback in 2015.
Beijing keeps a grip on currency flows and the yuan can only
move up or down against the dollar by two percent daily from a mid-rate set by
the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), the central bank.
But after a surprise devaluation last August — a move
intended to bring it closer to its market value according to Beijing — the yuan
is being dragged down by the vast outflows of capital.
Chinese citizens are allowed to convert the equivalent of
$50,000 from the domestic currency under an annual quota, though many seek ways
to evade the barrier. A popular method is borrowing the quota of other people,
such as family members.
When the PBoC in mid-December signaled a change in the way
it manages the yuan’s value by measuring the unit against a basket of
currencies instead of pegging it to the dollar, the move increased the level of
anxiety.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch said the lack of “clear and
transparent” rules for the basket led to confusion in the market. At the same
time, the decision by the US Federal Reserve to raise interest rates has put
downward pressure on the yuan.
Chinese officials deny plans to devalue the currency, amid
fears Beijing is seeking a currency war to help boost its flagging exports.
“The fluctuations in the currency market are a result of
market forces and the Chinese government has no intention and no policy to
devalue its currency,” Vice President Li Yuanchao told Bloomberg.
But Beijing faces a dilemma, he said. On the one hand, China
wants to expand use of the yuan internationally. At the same time, the
government needs to ensure the unit remains stable.
Declining reserves
To keep its currency steady, China has been diving into its
foreign exchange reserves — already the world’s largest — to buy massive
amounts of yuan.
But it is a bitter pill to swallow. China’s foreign exchange
reserves fell $108 billion in December — the biggest monthly decline on record
— to $3.3 trillion.
“The PBoC has enough reserves to keep selling at December’s
rate until mid-2018 but it would presumably throw in the towel before they were
all exhausted,” said Williams of Capital Economics.
The central bank has also refrained from loosening monetary
policy by cutting reserve requirements — the amount of funds that banks must
put aside — on fears of exacerbating the yuan’s depreciation, analysts said.
Some say China will need to devalue the yuan, and have even
called on Beijing to move rapidly towards a free float of the currency.
But others believe such a move would reflect poorly on
China, which in November received approval from the International Monetary Fund
for the yuan to be included in its basket of elite currencies.
“The potential disruption to financial stability outside
China, and with the risk of an Asian currency war, would ultimately feedback
negatively to China,” said Michala Marcussen, global head of economics at
Societe Generale.
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