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Este blog trata basicamente de ideias, se possível inteligentes, para pessoas inteligentes. Ele também se ocupa de ideias aplicadas à política, em especial à política econômica. Ele constitui uma tentativa de manter um pensamento crítico e independente sobre livros, sobre questões culturais em geral, focando numa discussão bem informada sobre temas de relações internacionais e de política externa do Brasil. Para meus livros e ensaios ver o website: www.pralmeida.org. Para a maior parte de meus textos, ver minha página na plataforma Academia.edu, link: https://itamaraty.academia.edu/PauloRobertodeAlmeida;

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sexta-feira, 6 de setembro de 2013

China aprofunda o capitalismo e o livre fluxo de capitais - AFP (Shanghai Daily)

Vamos ver o que acham desta medida, o que dizem deste avanço na liberalização desenfreada dos capitais especulativos, desta "financeirização" da economia -- como eles gostam de dizer -- os companheiros, que até há pouco estavam elogiando o capitalismo regulado pelo Estado típico (segundo eles) do modelo chinês, ou seja, a mão visível do Estado tomando conta desses mercados sempre turbulentos suscetíveis de provocar crises e, sobretudo, na origem das crises financeiras provocadas pela desregulação.
Tudo isso, e mais ainda, está sendo feito pela China, que desde muitos anos é muito mais capitalista, e economicamente muito mais livre do que o Brasil...
Paulo Roberto de Almeida

China will allow unfettered yuan exchange in city zone

China will allow unfettered exchange of its currency in its first free trade zone in Shanghai in a bold push to reform the world’s second largest economy.
The free trade zone is intended to make the city a true international trade and financial center.
According to a draft plan, the zone goes beyond greater liberalization of trade to take in investment and financial services, including free convertibility of currency.
Convertibility of the yuan — allowing the currency to be freely bought and sold, and with it the movement of funds into and out of China — is the main obstacle preventing Shanghai from competing with global financial centers such as New York or London.
The government keeps a tight grip on the capital account — investment and financial transactions, rather than those related to trade — on worries that unpredictable inflows or outflows could harm the economy and reduce its control over it.
But companies in the zone will have the freedom to trade the yuan, according to the plan.
“Under the pre-condition that risk can be controlled, in the zone convertibility of the renminbi on the capital account will be conducted, the first to carry out and test (it),” the draft plan said.
The yuan has so far only been convertible for trade — to buy imported goods or turn revenue from exports back into local funds.
A government official familiar with the plan said companies registered in the free trade zone could open special accounts to freely exchange yuan, but with only a few exceptions they would be required to close their onshore Chinese accounts.
Under the draft plan, the zone would let interest rates be set by the market. China currently fixes deposit rates by administrative order, but the central bank began allowing banks to decide their own lending rates in July.
According to the Ministry of Commerce, the  zone groups four existing areas in Shanghai: an international airport, deepwater port, a bonded zone and a logistics area.
The draft plan said the zone would “support” establishment of foreign and joint venture banks and welcome privately funded financial institutions.
The project as a whole “will be a bold step to escalate China’s economic development to the next level,” ANZ Banking Group said in a research report this week. “Its success could be a model for the next stage of China’s economic reform, opening up and capital account liberalization.” But it warned of an increased risk of large capital flows.
For trade, the government envisions making the zone a center for cross-border e-commerce transactions, a plan which may require cooperation with a payments provider, officials said.
The zone would create a platform for trading commodities such as metals, energy and farm products, and gradually allow foreign companies to directly trade commodities futures, according to the draft plan.
The State Council gave the go-ahead for the zone in August and details will be announced after the “overall plan” is approved on September 27, officials said. The National People’s Congress will have to approve rules for the zone at its annual meeting next March.
1. Banking services
• Allow the establishment of foreign-funded banks and joint venture banks.
• Allow Chinese banks to conduct offshore business.
2. Health and medical insurance
• Pilot establishment of foreign-funded professional health and medical insurance firms.
3. Financial leasing
• Scrap capital requirements for single aircraft or single vessel company subsidiaries set up by financial leasing companies.
4. Ocean cargo shipping
• Relax limits on foreign investment proportions in joint venture international shipping companies.
• Allow non-Chinese flag ships owned or controlled by Chinese companies to carry out container operations between Shanghai and other domestic coastal ports.
5. International ship management
• Allow wholly foreign-owned international ship management companies.
6. Value-added telecommunications
• Allow foreign-funded firms to run some value-added telecommunications business.
7. Game and amusement devices
• Allow foreign-funded companies to manufacture and sell game and amusement devices. Devices that pass content inspections can be sold on the domestic market.
8. Auction of cultural relics
• Allow foreign-owned and joint venture auction houses to conduct auctions of cultural relics within the free trade zone.
9. Legal services
• Explore mechanisms for Chinese law firms to cooperate with overseas (including Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau) counterparts.
10. Credit investigation
• Allow the establishment of foreign-funded credit investigation agencies.
11. Travel agencies
• Allow joint venture travel agencies to operate outbound tourism business, with the exception of Taiwan as a destination.
12. Employment agencies
• Allow the establishment of joint venture employment agencies, with foreign ownership up to 70 percent.
13. Investment management
• Allow the establishment of foreign-funded joint-stock investment companies.
14. Engineering design
• Eliminate some qualification requirements to provide services in Shanghai.
15. Construction services
• Eliminate limits on the Chinese and foreign proportions of joint construction projects in Shanghai.
16. Cultural performance agencies
• Allow wholly foreign-owned performance agencies to provide services to Shanghai.
17. Entertainment venues
• Allow the establishment of wholly foreign-owned places of entertainment within the free trade zone.
18. Education and vocational skills training
• Allow the establishment of joint-venture for-profit education and skills training providers.
19. Medical services
• Allow the establishment of wholly foreign-owned medical institutions.

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