The wall is starting to crack英汉对照.doc
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1、The wall is starting to crack.For years, China has made it tough for capital to flow to and from its economy, the second-largest in the world. Now, the government in Beijing is forging ahead with a campaign to bring the yuan onto the world stage and breaches are appearing in that formidable financia
2、l barrier.A yuan thats more widely used in international trade and investment could eventually challenge the dollars supremacy, correct some of the imbalances that plague the Chinese and global economy, and force a profligate U.S. to live within its means.It wont be an easy transition. There are pow
3、erful vested interests in China that are satisfied with the status quo and will try to put the brakes on any reform effort. But the changes China has made so far have generated momentum both at home and internationally and may prove too strong to resist.For more than a decade, Chinas closed capital
4、account has been a defining feature of the global economy. It has insulated the mainland from international capital flows, enabling China to ride out the Asian financial crisis in 1997 and leaving its banks unscathed by the near-collapse of the U.S. financial system in 2008.As important, denying for
5、eign-exchange markets a role in setting the exchange rate has allowed the government to maintain the value of the yuan at an artificially low level supporting a 30-year export boom. Since Chinese savers cant take their money overseas, banks have also gotten away with offering them low interest rates
6、, keeping the cost of capital for industry at bargain-basement prices and underpinning an investment binge.Take the example of Shenzhen a fishing village in 1979, in 2011 a metropolis of 14 million built around the worlds fourth-busiest port. Low-cost capital subsidized the construction of transport
7、 and power infrastructure, factories and production lines. An undervalued yuan, combined with low cost of labor, enabled companies to undercut their foreign rivals on price.But manipulation of the exchange rate and repression of the interest rate comes at a cost. Cheap capital has resulted in overca
8、pacity in the industrial sector and bubbles in the mainlands property market. Managing the exchange rate in the face of trade surpluses has resulted in the buildup of gargantuan foreign-exchange reserves $3.04 trillion that China has little choice but to recycle as cut-price loans to the U.S.One of
9、the first cracks in Chinas restrictive policy came in July 2009. with a plan to allow settlement of import and export transactions in yuan. Wider international use of the yuan is intended to reduce transaction costs for Chinas importers and exporters, guard against the risk of a collapse in dollar t
10、rade financing as occurred at the end of 2008 and fly the flag for a rising economic world power.By the first quarter of 2011, $55 billion of Chinas trade 7% of the total was settled in yuan. At the end of April, yuan deposits in the Hong Kong banking system had risen to 511 billion, or $79 billion,
11、 up roughly ninefold from July 2009 when the settlement program was launched.Restrictions on outbound flows are also being lifted. In the past month, the Shanghai government announced plans to allow residents of the city to make investments overseas.But more substantial opening of the capital accoun
12、t will require progress in two areas: an exchange rate that is close to fair value and market-set interest rates. The yuan is still undervalued, but two factors suggest its much closer to market value than it used to be: It has appreciated 20% in real terms against a trade-weighted basket of currenc
13、ies since 2005, and Chinas current-account surplus fell to 5.2% of gross domestic product in 2010 from 10.1% in 2007.If the yuan is approaching fair value, the Chinese government will be able to loosen controls on the capital account with less chance of triggering destabilizing speculative inflows.C
14、hinas interest rates, meanwhile, are still set by the government. But the Peoples Bank of China is attempting to make progress, by taking a leaf out of the mainlands economic history.At the beginning of the reform era, Chinas government designated Shenzhen as a special economic zone where market-bas
15、ed policies could be tried before being expanded to the rest of the country. Hong Kong will serve as a similar site of experimentation for reform of the mainlands financial system. Yields on yuan-denominated debt trading in Hong Kong are already set by the market rather than with reference to the Pe
16、oples Bank of Chinas benchmark interest rate.According to the Royal Bank of Scotland, the value of bonds outstanding in this so-called dim-sum market has risen to the equivalent of $15.8 billion from about $5.3 billion at the end of 2009. McDonalds Corp. and Caterpillar Inc. are among the companies
17、that have turned to the new market for financing.The increase in trade settlement and the development of Hong Kong as a yuan financial center are mutually reinforcing. More yuan trade settlement adds to the pool of liquidity in Hong Kong, encouraging the development of more yuan investment products,
18、 and greater variety of investment products reinforces the incentive to use the yuan in trade settlement.What Comes NextNow pressure is building on China to open further channels into its capital markets. The question is whether change comes fast or slow. Chinas leaders seemed to be taking the cauti
19、ous route. The target of making Shanghai an international financial center by 2020 was regarded as the de facto target date for capital-account opening. But the rapid progress of the past year has raised expectations of opening earlier.If China accelerates its timetable, the implications are enormou
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