Wandering China

AN 'OVERSEAS CHINESE' STUDENT'S JOURNEY INTO DISCOVERING THE IMAGINATION OF CHINA.

China-ASEAN FTA to accelerate RMB regionalization

Further evidence of China making inroads towards its strategic shield of ASEAN. It will be interesting to see the yuan becoming the standard. Further to its growing power, this move will surely set massive changes to the status quo. China is really set to change the world in a multi-faceted way, if it has not already begun to do so.

Quotable Quotes – “China is a huge market for us. Guangxi’s market alone is larger than that in our whole country. We prefer yuan as the trading currency if the Chinese part want the same,” Grace See Choo, managing director of Grace Cosmetics, a Malaysian cosmetic company.

China-ASEAN FTA to accelerate RMB regionalization
Source – Xinhua News Agency, 23 October 2009

NANNING, Oct. 23 (Xinhua) — The Chinese currency yuan is expected to play a bigger role in regional trade as the China-ASEAN Free Trade Area (CAFTA) is to be realized on January 1 of 2010.

“The upcoming CAFTA, which boasts the largest population among all the world’s FTAs and allows zero-tariff on 90 percent of products traded between China and ASEAN, will quicken the process of RMB regionalization, “Xu Ningning, executive secretary general of China-ASEAN Business Council, told Xinhua at the 6th China-ASEAN Expo in Nanning, capital of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.

Free trade demands free flow of currency, making possible the regional use of RMB, he said.

The expo, held from Oct. 20 to 24 ahead of the operation of FTA to embrace free trade and mutual investment, attracted state leaders, high-ranking officials and entrepreneurs from inside and beyond the ASEAN region.

Alongkorn Ponlaboot, deputy minister of commerce of Thailand, believed RMB would play a more important role in bilateral trade between China and ASEAN in the future.

He said yuan was a very stable currency and expanding its use could help reduce risks faced by the ASEAN countries in using the U.S. dollar, which has become highly volatile as a result of the global financial crisis.

Pung Kheav Se, general manager of Canadia Bank Plc. of Cambodia, echoed Thailand’s deputy minister, saying trade between China and ASEAN kept growing and less risk by the use of RMB would benefit both sides.

Data from China’s General Administration of Customs showed trade between China and ASEAN totaled 105.88 billion U.S. dollars in 2004, and rose to 231.07 billion U.S. dollars in 2008. China and ASEAN are currently the fourth largest trade partners to each other.

CHALLENGES AND EFFORTS

However, the use of yuan in ASEAN fell far short of the trade growth between China and ASEAN. Currently RMB settlement was mainly adopted in border trade which accounted for only 10 percent of the China-ASEAN bilateral trades, Teng Chong, board chairman of Guangxi Beibu Gulf Bank, told Xinhua.

Pung Kheav Se said currently RMB, U.S. dollars, Thai Baht and Vietnamese Dong were in circulation in Cambodia, but the amount of yuan was small, mainly used for tourism and small commodity business. He did not give specific figures.

The main reason was that Cambodia was not a developed economy and some people had inadequate knowledge about yuan, he said, suggesting China should gradually establish credit system and settlement mechanism of yuan in ASEAN, and then expand its use globally.

Su Ning, vice governor of China’s central bank, said financial cooperation between China and ASEAN was still at the initial phase and financial markets were not open enough. But potential for cooperation was huge as finance in China and ASEAN seeing fast development currently.

China has been launching pilot RMB programs over the years, but the pace has obviously quickened since the onset of the global financial crisis as the U.S. dollar has been getting weaker, arousing concerns that an unstable dollar would lead to increased costs and risks for traders.

Last December, China announced pilot programs to settle trade deals in yuan between the country’s two economic powerhouses, Guangdong Province and the Yangtze River Delta (which includes Shanghai) and the two special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macao. A similar arrangement was proposed for exporters in Guangxi and Yunnan Province in southwestern China to settle trade in yuan with ASEAN.

In April, China announced a pilot program to settle cross-border trade deal in yuan in five cities including Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai and Dongguan.

Currently, China has sealed cooperation agreements of bilateral trade settlement with the central banks of Laos and Vietnam in ASEAN.

EXPECT WIDER RMB USE

A Vietnamese furniture trading company named Vietnam Charity Trading Company Ltd. had attended the expo for five years. It began trades with China 22 years ago and has been exporting 70 percent of its products to China.

The company buys materials from Laos and sells products to China and other countries, in which dollars, yuan and Vietnamese Dong are adopted. “That makes the process very complex and always results in losses because of the fluctuation of exchange rates,” said Huang Yifan, executive director of the company.

“I really hope there is a single currency like the euro to cut off the cost of exchanging currency and make the whole process easier,” she said.

“I hope yuan could be the one as it has been stable and welcomed by the ASEAN people,” she said, adding that yuan is very popular in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos.

Grace See Choo, managing director of Grace Cosmetics, a Malaysian cosmetic company, said her company had been importing packing materials from China since 2000. “We always traded in yuan, which operates well,” she said.

“China is a huge market for us. Guangxi’s market alone is larger than that in our whole country. We prefer yuan as the trading currency if the Chinese part want the same,” She said. The company now is looking for a Chinese agent to explore Chinese market.

Although yuan had gained reputation among ASEAN people, efforts of the ten nations’ central banks were still necessary to commit to a consensus of popularizing RMB, Teng Chong said.

Xu Ningning said new economic situation had created stage in Asia for RMB. The three FTAs between ASEAN and China, Japan and the Republic of Korea, respectively, will build a wider platform for RMB exchanging.

“Although it needs time to breed a new trade market or a new currency market, the CAFTA is believed to create new space for the regionalization of RMB,” Xu said.

Filed under: ASEAN, Economics, xinhua

We want good ties, says China

Perhaps it is not far from the truth that good ties with its neighbours benefits China in many ways. They extend their strategic shield, generate more avenues for income, and have less things to worry about. It is that simple. What is more pertinent though, from this report, is three things. First, that yes, ASEAN no longer looks at China warily. Second, China is really serious about building an aircraft carrier. Third, China may be in a state of Zen by not asserting territorial claims but as its people start to become more savvy and in the know of current affairs, they are surely pressuring their leaders to assert some of the power they have gained in recent times.

Quotable Quotes – “We face a lot of pressure from within the country…We have to explain to our people why we adopt such a policy (of restraint).’ China’s ambassador to ASEAN Madam Xue Hanqin

We want good ties, says China
By Peh Shing Huei
Straits Times - Oct 22, 2009
Source –  Singapore Ministry of Foreign Affairs

BEIJING: China has never bullied small countries, and has, in fact, exercised great restraint in its tussle with Asean nations over islands in the South China Sea, the country’s ambassador to Asean said yesterday.

Despite strong domestic pressure for Beijing to assert its territorial sovereignty, Madam Xue Hanqin urged South-east Asian nations to understand that China places a premium on good neighbourly relations. ‘We face a lot of pressure from within the country,’ she said at a press conference here, ahead of this weekend’s Asean-related summits in Thailand. ‘We have to explain to our people why we adopt such a policy (of restraint).’

China has been involved in territorial disputes with four Asean countries – Malaysia, Vietnam, the Philippines and Brunei – over the Spratly and Paracel islands for decades. Military clashes broke out in the late 1980s and mid-1990s.

The spat surfaced again earlier this year, when the countries submitted their territorial claims to be compliant with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

In response to moves by Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam, China sent fishery patrols to the potentially oil-rich island groups – and spoke about the usefulness of a Chinese aircraft carrier to settle future disputes. Chinese soldiers patrolling an islet in the Paracel chain reportedly angered the Asean countries by scrawling on a sandy beach ‘Long live the motherland’.

But despite such friction, Madam Xue insisted yesterday that the summit was not the right occasion to discuss the territorial claims.

Beijing prefers to handle the issue through bilateral talks with the claimant states, and the Chinese delegation is heading to Thailand to ‘discuss cooperation and not to quarrel’, she added.

Those days of Asean wariness towards China are over, she said, when asked by a Taiwanese reporter for her views on Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew’s comments in his memoirs regarding the grouping’s suspicions of Beijing.

Mr Lee wrote, in a reference to the late 1970s: ‘Because China was exporting revolution to South-east Asia, my Asean neighbours wanted Singapore to rally with them not against the Soviet Union but against China.’

Madam Xue replied that Mr Lee was referring to the Cold War period and that it was true Asean countries were very suspicious of China. But today, the two sides have greatly strengthened relations.

She said China has proven its sincerity to Asean in the past 20 years. One example is the US$10 billion (S$14 billion) development fund which China pledged towards infrastructure-building in Asean.

Additional reporting by Lin Zhaowei in Nanning

Filed under: ASEAN, International Relations, Straits Times

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Good Reads

A History of Hong Kong (Welsh, rev. 1997)

Behind the Open Door: Foreign Enterprises in the Chinese Marketplace (Rosen, 1999)

Beyond the Chinese Face: Insights from Psychology (Bond, 1991)

Charm Offensive: How China's Soft Power is Transforming the World (Kurlantzick, 2007)

China and the Chinese Overseas (Wang, 2003)

China Off Center - Mapping the Margins of the Middle Kingdom (Blum & Jensen, 2002)

China Wakes (Kristof & Wudunn, 1995)

China's Transformations(Jensen & Weston, 2007)

Chinas Unlimited (Lee, 2003)

China’s Security Interests in the 21st Century (Ong, 2007)

Chinese among others - Emigration in Modern Times (Kuhn, 2008)

Chinese Kinship (Chao, 1983)

Chinese Nationalism (Unger, ed. 1996)

Chinese Strategic Culture and Foreign Policy Decision-Making (Feng, 2007)

Dialetic of the Chinese Revolution (Ci, 1994)

Don't Leave Home - Migration and Chinese (Wang, 2001)

Integrating China into the Global Economy (Lardy, 2002)

Interpreting China’s Grand Strategy - Past, Present and Future (Swaine & Tellis, 2000)

Kinship, Contract, Community & State (Cohen, 2005)

Re Orient - Change in Asian Societies (Vervoorn, 2006)

The Gare of Heavenly Peace: The Chinese and their Revolution, 1895-1980 (Spence, 1986)

The Great Chinese Revolution: 1800-1985 (Fairbank, 1987)

The Overseas Chinese of South East Asia (Witzel and Rae, 2008)

The Paradox of China's Post-Mao Reforms (Goldman and Macfarquhar, ed. 1999)

The Real Chinese Question (Holcombe, 1901) **

Understanding China: A guide to China's Economy, History, and Political Structure (Starr, 1997)

Understanding China and India - Security Implications for the United States and the World (Lal, 2006)

Weaving the Net: Conditional Engagement with China (Shinn, ed., 1996)

Where Underpants Come From: From Checkout to Cotton Field - Travels through the New China. (Bennett, 2008)

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