IMF boss Christine Lagarde is gung-ho about it. IMF staff is too. The
Executive Board will consider it on November 30 and in all likelihood
approve it. It will take effect in October 2016. Then it’s a done deal:
the Chinese yuan will be added to the IMF’s currency basket, the Special
Drawing Rights (SDR). A step toward becoming a major global reserve
currency.
IMF staff had determined that the yuan meets the requirements of being a “freely usable” currency, Lagarde said in a statement,
so a currency that is “‘widely used’ for international transactions and
‘widely traded’ in the principal foreign exchange markets.”
China also overcame other hurdles the IMF had put before it, after
numerous reforms to liberalize its currency and credit markets and offer
more transparency. The IMF’s Executive Board has the final say, but
Lagarde will chair the meeting. And the rubber stamps are lined up on
the conference room table.
Some countries, including France and Britain, have already expressed support for the change. According to Reuters,
a Treasury spokesperson said the US government has always backed the
yuan’s inclusion if it met the IMF’s criteria, and would “review the
IMF’s paper in that light.”
The yuan has arrived – at the elite club for the biggest currency warriors: the dollar, the yen, the euro, and the pound.
China has long sought to give its currency more global weight, both
as payments currency and ultimately as reserve currency, given the
enormous size of its economy. By being included in the SDR, the yuan
moves a big step closer, becoming more palatable for central banks to
add to their foreign exchange reserves.
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