IMF's
Lagarde says inclusion of China's yuan in SDR basket
question of when
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[March 20, 2015] SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - China's yuan at some point would be incorporated in the
International Monetary Fund's Special Drawing Right (SDR) currency
basket, said Christine Lagarde, Managing Director of the IMF, said in
Shanghai on Friday.
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"It's not a question of if, it's a question of when," she said
during a question and answer session following a speech at Fudan
University.
"There's a still a lot of work to be done and everyone knows that,"
she added.
He comments follow speculation that the IMF may decide to include
the yuan in the SDR basket - currently made up of dollars, yen,
pounds and euros - during a five-year review due to be conducted
this year.
The U.S. government is considered to be opposed to a move, that
might diminish the dollar's standing internationally.
The first step in the review of the basket for the SDR, an
international reserve asset, is an informal board meeting in May,
followed by a formal review in the autumn. Any changes would come
into effect in January 2016, but would require a 70 or 85 percent
majority on the IMF council.
Though it keeps a tight rein on the yuan's movements and maintains
strong capital controls, Beijing is pushing for the increased use of
the yuan for trade and investment as part of a long-term strategic
goal to reduce dependence on the dollar.
In her speech, Lagarde also said China's biggest current challenge
is escaping the "middle-income trap" - a term which refers to the
large number of developing economies that experienced heady periods
of investment and export-driven growth based on cheap labour only to
see their economies flatten out as their cost advantages shrink.
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Only a few countries like Taiwan and South Korea are considered to
have successfully made the transition in recent decades.
Lagarde called for slower, higher quality growth in China.
"By brewing its economic cup of tea more slowly, China will end up
with a richer taste," she said.
China's economic growth slowed to just 7.4 percent last year, the
slowest in 24 years, and the IMF estimates it will slow further to
just 6.8 percent in 2015. That is below the Chinese government's
official target of 7.0 percent.
(Reporting By Nathaniel Taplin and Pete Sweeney; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore)
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