"This house believes the yuan will be the world's main reserve currency within ten years."
- As trade within Asia becomes increasingly centred on China, it will start to make sense to denominate that trade in yuan. And since the yuan is already a good store of value, it will soon also become a medium of exchange. Once these conditions are in place, it will make sense to use the yuan as a reserve currency.
- Why China would want to have a world-dominating currency is unclear, and such an objective is inconsistent with its huge and still growing foreign-reserve holdings. The angst about the dollar losing its hegemony is partly due to Asia's foreign reserves being too large in the first place.
Sorry, it is even simpler than that; would you put your money in a currency where a small number of people with views different from most people who believe in free markets make most economic decisions? America's recent adhoc regulatory changes don't make a much better case, but I think most people would agree America's economy is still more predictable and market driven than China's. So far.
How can one even ponder that a closed, communist gov't provide a reserve currency? Unless China's markets are completely open, this is a ridiculous consideration. Will that happen within 10 years?
The Americans have soiled their patch & no longer have the confidence of the rest of the World.
Years of profriglate waste in defence, in pork-barrel politics, in self-indulgence USA no longer deserves to be the World's Reserve Currency
I'd bet 3:1 on the IMF's SDR, and inside of 3 years from November.
Noteworthy is the acceptance of the criteria for adopting the proposition - the basic set of conditions for a currency reserve. However, even the Defender concedes that not all the conditions are yet being met, but remains optimistic they will all be fulfilled rather soon.
If there were only ever two contenders for the reserve role, the debate would be simpler. But there are at least two other possibilities: one is the euro, the other is gold.
Every time gold is brought up, it brings howls of ridicule from official economists, but if you wanted specie not subject to public meddling or legal dilution, freely traded and internationally recognised as a store of value, gold meets the criteria. As to 'trust'- investors are voting with their wallets. Frankly, this blogger thinks we have run out of arguments against gold. Except one; most central banks have disposed of their gold holdings, and would have to re-build them from low levels. I leave it to others to ponder the euro option.
I supervised an (undergrad) thesis last year examining the shift in currency regimes more broadly. The last shift was from the pound sterling to the dollar; she looked at the Ottoman Empire to provide what turned out to be a couple additional data points. [I also happen to have followed and taught about the Chinese economy for 25 years, albeit not as a primary specialty.]
A screw up on the US end is at the moment not so hard for me to envisage. But I worry about a long-running low level of deflation and poor growth la Japan. That would be unfortunate for my family and I since I live in the US, but I don't think that would be the sort of thing to force the rest of the world to look elsewhere for a reserve currency.
I can't believe this is even being discussed on the Economist. China is nowhere near a stable country. The fundamental problems they have brewing create risks that are much greater than the problems the US has. How can the Yuan become a currency reserve when it isn't even market traded? It's like skipping a whole stage of development. The odds of one of the major problems in China (particularly in real estate) slowing growth, and eventually tearing the country apart over the next 5 years is quite high. Right now they are putting on a good face and saying everything is running smoothly so they can keep their consumer confidence high and make the transition from a manufacturing to more service based industries and "decouple" from dependance on demand from the West. I don't see the decoupling happening fast enough. That is why China continues to artificially devalue the Yuan and quell the increasing protests (now in the thousands per day).
I think it will become a reserve currency not the main reserve currency. As China becomes the world's biggest economy, its currency will become important and it will surely be worth holding reserves of it, but upheaval in China is just as likely as it is anywhere else, and it would be foolish to put too many eggs in that basket. I think the world is headed for a much more multipolar future in lots of ways, and I'd be keeping reserves of every big economy's currency.
We all know the privilege of having one's currency as the world's main currency comes with an opportunity and a price. The opportunity often manifest in the country's ability to manipulate the value of its currency to its advantage, such as devaluation. The price comes in the form of such a country bearing the burden of ensuring global financial stability. Does China has the ability and willingness to carry such a burden? In other words, for the yuan to become world's main reserve currency, China's economic growth alone is not enough; the Chinese government's political will to take that burden, and the ability to do so, will have to be there as well. So this debate is exciting but sterile because we do not know whether the Chinese leaders are prepared to accept that onerous responsibility. Witnessing that the United States is taking much of the flak and pain for the economic woes around the world now as never before, China might be happy leaving that burden to others, while making noise against the dollar when it is beneficial.
Murari Sharma