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A more global yuan is not a zero-sum game for China and the US

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Across the spectrum of recent public discussion about de-dollarisation, commentators have tended to focus on negative factors and ramifications.

American monetary profligacy, fiscal incoherence and the weaponisation of the dollar, are driving other countries to settle bilateral trade in their own currencies and encouraging central bank reserve allocations to gold.

Counterarguments against the greenback’s demise tend to focus on its entrenched status and the absence of credible alternatives. China’s lack of a fully open capital account, unwillingness to run persistent trade deficits and a one-party political structure all mean that the renminbi can never challenge the dollar’s global leadership.

These arguments, however, neglect the growing attractiveness of the Chinese currency both as a store of value and as a vehicle for international trade and investment. Significant developments in China’s financial markets are changing the game board.

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* First published in The South China Morning Post (4 May 2023)

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How Hong Kong leader’s Middle East tour could herald seismic shift in China-Saudi Arabia relationship

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A covert visit by US Treasury Secretary William Simon to Saudi Arabia in July 1974 radically transformed global energy and financial security. An ensuing deal, under which the Middle East kingdom agreed to finance US government deficits in return for American military aid and equipment, laid the foundation for decades of economic growth and prosperity, and extended the dollar’s linchpin role in international financial markets.

Hong Kong Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu’s coming tour of the Middle East could herald a similarly seismic shift in the financial and strategic relationship between China and the Arab nation, and deepen Hong Kong’s role in international finance.

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* First published in The South China Morning Post (16 January 2023)

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Rebooting Hong Kong as an International Financial Center

Champagne corks were popping all over Hong Kong following the September 23 announcement by the government that it was scrapping compulsory quarantine for inbound travelers. The restrictions, in effect for 915 days, had exacted a heavy toll on the economy and morale in the Chinese special administrative region (SAR), whose second largest industry before Covid-19 had been tourism. As the city’s retailers and restauranteurs, as well as its flagship airline Cathay Pacific, can start to look forward to a return to normality, however, questions over the future of Hong Kong’s largest industry – financial services – linger.

More than just a key pillar of its own economy, Hong Kong’s capital markets play a critical role in facilitating trade and investment between China and the rest of the world. But the SAR’s standing as an international financial center has in recent years suffered numerous blows, both self-inflicted and outside its control.

In some ways, it is remarkable how resilient Hong Kong’s financial markets have been. In the wake of widespread social unrest in 2019 and in the midst of a global pandemic, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX), the city’s sole exchange operator, reported a record year for derivatives trading volumes and its second best-ever annual turnover in stocks in 2021. This is testament to Hong Kong’s unique advantages under the “one country, two systems” model governing the SAR since its return to Chinese sovereignty in 1997. Structural shifts in its internal and external environments, however, have created both significant challenges and huge new opportunities. If Hong Kong is to retain its status as a leading international financial center, then it must adapt to these changes and take proactive steps to prepare for the future.

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* First published in AsiaGlobal Online (6 October 2022)

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Why it is in US interests to give up its dollar privilege to forge a more neutral financial order

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Much ink has been spilled speculating over the longer-term consequences for the US dollar of the unprecedented financial sanctions imposed on Russia in the wake of military action in Ukraine. Will it lead the world to de-doll arise? And will it contribute to greater international adoption of the renminbi?

Perhaps. But these lines of discussion miss a more profound point: what do we risk by weaponising the global financial commons?

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* First published in The South China Morning Post (8 June 2022)

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The Asian Century needs better financial foundations

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Asia’s growing wealth has been accompanied by rising economic, cultural and political influence, prompting predictions that the region will come to dominate the 21st century. Investors have tended to focus most heavily on China, but the region is far larger than China alone.

Numerous other Asian nations are huge economies in their own right, and many have far more favourable demographics and higher long-term growth prospects. Nevertheless, the Covid-19 pandemic and intensifying Sino-US geopolitical tensions have radically transformed their operating environments. Without drastic changes to the underpinnings of their financial and economic systems, not only may the Asian Century never materialise, but underlying imbalances could precipitate social and economic turmoil.

The story of Asia’s rise in recent decades has been one of export-driven growth, leveraging the region’s abundant resources and its large supply of low-cost labour to produce goods and services for the West. This model has relied on three major factors.

First has been the political commitment of the West – and America, in particular – to open and free markets. Second, it has required the value of Asian currencies to be subdued (or, at least, certainly not set by market forces). Third has been Asian governments’ suppression of their own citizens’ consumption, partly via financial repression, but also through their social, fiscal, and industrial policies.

It is now clear that this model is not sustainable. A financially overstretched America cannot indefinitely continue spending beyond its means. The strains on middle class workers have already led to a surge in populist nationalism in the United States, which precipitated the Trump Administration’s trade war. The Covid-19 pandemic has generated further impetus for repatriating supply chains. Rising wealth and income inequality in a number of Asian countries is also threatening greater domestic instability.

China’s economic rise and growing trade with the region could certainly help cushion the blow of a fall in Western demand. However, while Chinese consumption and investment programmes such as the Belt and Road Initiative are a boon to its Asian neighbours, China has shown no inclination to run the protracted balance of payments deficits that the US has endured.

Chinese policymakers are acutely aware of the costs to the US of operating the primary global reserve currency and, as demonstrated by their cautious approach towards renminbi internationalisation, are unlikely to be willing absorb the rest of the world’s financial imbalances. Moreover, China’s rapidly ageing demographic profile will present it with numerous social and economic challenges over the coming decades, and likely limit its ability to absorb growing imports.

Singapore’s Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong’s thoughtful 2020 article in Foreign Affairs shows that Asian leaders already recognise the need to respond to their changing internal and external environments. Shouldering this responsibility will involve domestic reforms and making use of their increasing influence internationally. In the financial sphere, this would include three broad steps.

First would be to pursue fiscal policies that deliver a broader distribution of the fruits of economic development. This is necessary not just for maintaining social stability; as jobs become increasingly automated, future economic growth and prosperity will depend ever more on well-educated and highly skilled populations.

Second, Asian governments must wean themselves off their dependence on undervalued exchange rates and allow their currencies to reflect their true relative economic fundamentals: currencies must be allowed to find a proper market price. To manage this transition and avoid the risks of the high currency volatility experienced during the Asian Financial Crisis, Asian leaders should push for reforms to the global monetary system – in particular, to reduce excessive dependence on the US dollar.

Third, to support the foregoing two steps, Asian countries should deepen their financial market connectivity to improve regional market efficiency and access to capital. Notwithstanding strong economic growth, regional stock markets outside China (including Hong Kong) and Japan lack sufficient liquidity to attract larger numbers of global investors. In the past, initiatives such as the Asean Trading Link to pool regional liquidity have been stymied by narrow nationalistic interests. Nevertheless, all stand to benefit from enlarging the overall pie. The Eurobond market provides a good example of this, with swaps clearing centred on London, safekeeping and collateral management primarily handled in Brussels and Luxembourg, and issuers and investors spread across multiple countries.

Regional cooperation is needed to support the further development of local currency bond markets to reduce Asian corporations and governments’ dependence on US dollar issuance. Such cooperation would include lowering the barriers to intraregional investment flows, acceptance of Asian local currency sovereign bonds as good collateral in regional clearing houses, and depository and collateral management services designed to meet the needs of the region.

The infrastructure supporting this should be spread across multiple financial centres across Asia – not to render such a vision more politically palatable to individual countries, but because this enhances the mutual dependencies that foster cooperation and avoids excessive control over the system by any one country, which might later be tempted to abuse that position of power.

Amidst ongoing geopolitical tensions between China and the US, if (as Prime Minister Lee asserted) Asian countries “do not want to be forced to choose between the two”, then they must pull together to build the firmer financial foundations required to support their continued economic development.

* First published in The Straits Times (14 May 2022)

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Can Cryptocurrencies Challenge the Dollar’s Global Dominance?

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The rapid growth of cryptocurrencies in recent years has been viewed by many as a speculative bubble. However, it also reflects growing scepticism in fiat currencies and fears that prevailing monetary policies are debasing their value. While few today can imagine cryptocurrencies challenging the global dominance of the dollar, with its backing of the full faith and credit of the US Government, private currencies issued by commercial banks, railroad companies and even religious institutions had been widespread in the US until the 1860s. It was the National Bank Acts of that decade that imposed government supervision over the banking sector and helped establish a national currency. Ultimately, anything can serve as a currency – from cowrie shells or lumps of metal to bits of data on computer servers – so long as people believe in it. Where faith in a state-issued currency is undermined, the private sector will inevitably innovate to create substitutes.

 

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* First published in World Financial Review (24 March 2022)

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