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Enhanced Special Drawing Rights: How China Could Contribute to a Reformed International Monetary Architecture
Authors:Matthew Harrison  Geng Xiao
Affiliation:1. Associate, Hong Kong Institute of International Finance, China;2. Professor, Peking University HSBC Business School, China
Abstract:Since the end of the Bretton Woods era, the world has operated on a de facto system of free‐floating exchange rates, with the US dollar as the dominant international currency. The system, characterized by large pro‐cyclical capital flows and chronic imbalances, is inherently unstable, and has contributed to repeated crises, recessions and geopolitical tensions. One potentially “least‐difficult” line of reform would be to allow the evolution of a multi‐currency system, underpinned by an expanded role for Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). Attempts to promote wider use of the SDR have foundered on the liquidity premium. However, for Chinese corporations and institutions, at present restricted in their capital account activities, the SDR liquidity premium would appear less daunting. The Chinese authorities could provide policy encouragement for the use of SDRs by their institutions. This initiative, supported by China's Special Administrative Region Hong Kong, would kick‐start an international SDR ecosystem, and encourage even broader use of SDRs, to the benefit of international monetary stability.
Keywords:imbalances  international monetary architecture  monetary stability  reform  Special Drawing Rights  F33  G15  N20
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