China’s leaders want to improve the standard of living and increase its economic output. The Chinese have “pegged the yuan” to the US dollar but via an adjustable peg or “managed peg”. This floating peg has generally been on a downward trend since 2015 implying that the yuan has been steadily devaluing against the dollar, making Chinese exports relatively more competitive against dollar prices around the world. That allowed China’s economic growth to soar thanks to low-cost exports to the United States. As a result, China’s share of international trade and gross domestic product grew to around 10%. This has been a source of trade friction between China and the US.
As trade grew, so did the yuan’s popularity. In August 2015, it became the fourth most-used currency in the world. It rose from 12th place in just three years. It surpassed the Japanese yen, Canadian loonie, and the Australian dollar. Central banks should increase their foreign exchange reserves of yuan to provide funds for that level of trade. Central banks alone should purchase about $700 billion worth of yuan. But banks never purchased all the euros they should have, even when the European Union was the world’s largest economy. Most international transactions are still done in U.S. dollars, even though its trade has dropped.
The IMF requires China to liberalize its capital markets. It should allow the yuan to be freely traded on foreign exchange markets. That allows central banks to hold it as a reserve currency. For that to happen, China’s central bank must relax the yuan’s peg to the dollar. China must have clearer communications about its future actions regarding the yuan. That’s what the Federal Reserve does at each of its eight Federal Open Market Committee meetings.
In August 2015, the PBOC relaxed the yuan to dollar conversion rate.
Instead of a fixed exchange rate, it would set the yuan’s value to its closing value on the previous day. Instead of rising, as many expected, the yuan fell 3% over the next two days. The PBOC stabilized the rate. It now has the freedom to allow the yuan to be a stronger tool in monetary policy. The drop also silenced critics of China’s reforms, many of whom were members of the U.S. Congress. In December 2015, the Bank announced it would begin to shift the dollar peg to a basket of currencies. That basket includes the dollar, euro, yen, and 10 other currencies.